Subsidy Shortfall Sparks Concern
The payment industry has labeled the Union Budget's allocation of ₹2,000 crore for Unified Payments Interface (UPI) and RuPay debit card incentives as "paltry," falling significantly short of expectations that hovered above ₹10,000 crore. This funding is intended to compensate payment firms for facilitating billions of daily transactions, which are mandated to be free for consumers. Industry executives argue this sum is insufficient to sustain operations and drive the crucial next phase of digital payment adoption.
PCI's Stark Warning
The Payment Council of India (PCI), representing a vast segment of payment and fintech companies, issued a scathing critique. Chairman Vishwas Patel stated that processing 30 crore transactions daily for free with such minimal government allocation could "choke the entire ecosystem." He emphasized that these low incentives make it exceedingly difficult to onboard the next 300 million Indians onto the digital payments bandwagon and deploy necessary acceptance infrastructure in remote areas. The overall transaction value growth for UPI has already decelerated to 13 percent, signaling a need for robust support.
The MDR Imperative
Most payment firms are not seeking outright subsidies but rather the reintroduction of a controlled Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) for specific transactions. The PCI specifically proposed allowing a low, controlled MDR of 30 basis points (0.30%) for person-to-merchant (P2M) UPI transactions, exclusively for merchants with an annual turnover exceeding ₹20 lakh. This measure, they argue, would provide sustainable revenue streams without disrupting adoption at the grassroots level, as larger merchants often already pay MDR on other payment systems.
Rural Expansion Challenge
Expanding digital payment acceptance mechanisms into India's vast hinterland requires substantial investment in infrastructure and servicing. The government's decision to waive UPI MDR in 2020, while benefiting consumers and merchants, placed the cost burden squarely on payment service providers. Without adequate financial backing, like the proposed MDR for larger merchants, the industry fears it will be unable to meet the challenges of rural outreach and ensure seamless digital financial inclusion for all citizens.
Merchant Landscape
India boasts approximately six crore merchants accepting digital payments. However, a significant majority, around 90% or 5.4 crore, are classified as small merchants by the RBI, with an annual turnover of ₹20 lakh or below. The remaining 50 lakh merchants are categorized as large enterprises. The PCI's proposal specifically targets this large enterprise segment, suggesting that enabling MDR for them will provide vital revenue for service providers, thus indirectly supporting the entire ecosystem, including smaller merchants and consumers.