Non-cash payment in Vietnam is growing, but local preference for cash is still a problem (Photo: VNA) |
According to the State Bank of Vietnam, as of September there were 32 non-bank organisations licensed to supply intermediary payment services such as e-wallets and e-payment gateways.
Banks are also pushing for more payments using new technologies, with 24 enabling QR code payment and having around 50,000 code-scan points.
In the first six months of the year, e-payments via the internet jumped 60.64 percent in the number and 18.5 percent in the value over the same period last year. Mobile payments witnessed a year-on-year surge of 169.5 percent in the number of transactions.
Speaking at a recent conference organised by the Vietnam Bank Association and International Data Group Vietnam in HCM City, Neil Van Heerden, head of commercial - international at Thai financial technology company True Money, said non-cash payments were rising sharply in Vietnam due to the young population, rapidly growing economy and expanding middle class besides the rise of e-commerce and technological services companies.
Nguyen Hung, General Director of TPBank, said technology was also changing customers' habits and how they experience banks since they have more options and banks should be more customer-focused in their procedures and services.
Le Thanh Tam, Chairman of International Data Group Vietnam and ASEAN, said cash payments still accounted for 79 percent in Vietnam and paying through banks was still not common.
The financial technology (fintech) infrastructure is still restricted to big cities and digital fintech and its users are rare, according to Tam.
An executive from MOCA Technology and Service JSC said the Vietnamese habit of using cash was a core problem to the non-cash economy, but if technology was ready to satisfy their requirements, people would be willing to use non-cash payment in their day-to-day transactions, he said.
So fintech companies needed to expand the non-cash payment eco-system so that this method could become more popular and be used for important transactions, he said.
Once users realise non-cash payment is more simple and convenient than cash, they would be less hesitant to use it, he assured.
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