Billions of dollars in cash payments are made daily in emerging and developing countries, including wages, social transfers, humanitarian relief, and payments to suppliers and farmers. Shifting these payments from cash to digital has the potential to improve the lives of people on low incomes, particularly women. It also means that governments, companies, and international organizations can make and receive payments in a cheaper, safer, and more transparent way, helping to build economies that are inclusive.
A digital payment, sometimes called an electronic payment, is the transfer of value from one payment account to another using a digital device or channel. This definition may include payments made with bank transfers, mobile money, QR codes, and payment instruments such as credit, debit, and prepaid cards. Digital payments can be partially digital, primarily digital, or fully digital.
Digital payments offer significant benefits to individuals, companies, governments, and international development organizations. These benefits include:
We do not want to abolish physical cash, but rather wish to ensure that people have choice in how they make and receive payments. It is important for people to have digital payment options that are responsible and “better than cash” – for example, a woman can have a payment account in her own name, which she manages. To be clear, we do not want to prevent people from using cash, as sometimes it is the best or only payment option. Governments, businesses, and people are looking for a better value proposition than cash, to improve efficiency, transparency, security, women’s economic participation, financial inclusion, and inclusive growth.
To realize their full potential for people and economies, digital payments need to work every time, with effective, timely recourse available if they fail. The terms need to be transparent, and funds and data need to be protected, with accountability when this does not happen. Further, to effectively build sustainable economies, digital payments need to treat all people fairly, and to function across providers so there is competition and choice. These are responsible digital payments.
Digital innovation is continuing to make major improvements in payments and all types of financial service, and the pace of innovation has substantially increased in recent years. The most useful overview of the latest innovations impacting the payments industry is Payments aspect of financial inclusion in the age of fintech, published by the Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures and the World Bank Group