India's UPI Proves Public Digital Models Can Beat Private Networks

A new report states India's Unified Payments Interface (UPI) demonstrates that a public, interoperable digital payments model can surpass private networks in scale and inclusion. It highlights UPI's growth to 400 million users and its role as a strategic, sovereign payments infrastructure. The system, processing over 170 billion transactions yearly at zero consumer cost, is now competing with giants like Visa and Mastercard. The report positions UPI as an open, global benchmark for developing countries seeking rapid digital payments growth without reliance on multinational corporations.

Key Points: India's UPI: Public Digital Model Surpasses Private Networks

  • UPI proves public models beat private networks
  • Offers template for developing nations
  • Achieves financial inclusion at national scale
  • Operates at zero cost to consumers
2 min read

India's UPI proves public digital model can surpass private networks: Report

A new report highlights India's UPI as a global benchmark, proving public, interoperable digital payment models can achieve greater scale and inclusion than private networks.

"It is no wonder that international organisations now cite India's digital-payments architecture as a global benchmark. - Interest.co.nz report"

New Delhi, Feb 21

India's Unified Payments Interface, the world's largest real‑time payments system, has proved that inclusion and scale can go together and that a "public, interoperable model can surpass private networks," a new report said.

The report from Interest.co.nz said it offers a template for developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America to achieve rapid digital‑payments growth without dependence on multinational corporations.

"It is no wonder that international organisations now cite India's digital-payments architecture as a global benchmark," said the publication.

By moving money over 170 billion times per year across a billion people, instantly and cheaply, India proved that "the world's digital financial highways could one day flow through the country," and signalled its arrival "as a global economic and high-tech superpower," the report said.

"For a country that has lived through foreign-exchange shortages and external vulnerabilities in the past, this kind of sovereignty over payments infrastructure is strategically transformational," it said.

India treats digital payments as public infrastructure, not as a premium private service, which was evident in UPI's growth to 400 million ordinary users by 2024, up from 30 million in 2017, according to the report. "This is financial inclusion at a national scale, not a mere slogan," the report said.

Comparing UPI's scale to US's payment networks such as Visa and Mastercard, the report said that "a piece of Indian public infrastructure that operates at zero cost to consumers is already playing in the same league as the world's private payment giants and growing faster than both."

Further comparing China's Alipay and WeChat Pay with UPI, it said unlike those systems, India's network is an open and fully interoperable public platform that every bank and fintech can plug into.

The report cited Reserve Bank of India's data saying UPI accounted for over 80 per cent of all digital payment volumes in India, and that digital payments themselves constitute nearly all the payment volume in the country.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Absolutely brilliant. My 70-year-old mother in our village now pays for everything with her phone. That's inclusion. The zero-cost model is key – Visa/Mastercard would have charged for every transaction. This is a model the world should follow.
S
Sarah B
Visiting India from the US was an eye-opener. The payment system here is lightyears ahead. Back home, we're still swiping cards and signing receipts. The interoperability is genius – one app works everywhere. India has truly leapfrogged.
V
Vikram M
While UPI is fantastic, we must not get complacent. The report is right about sovereignty, but what about the frequent technical glitches and failed transactions? NPCI and banks need to improve backend stability. Also, more focus on cybersecurity is needed as adoption grows.
R
Rohit P
The comparison with China's closed systems is the most important point. Alipay and WeChat Pay are walled gardens. UPI is an open highway. Any bank, any app can join. That's true democratic tech. Jio, Airtel, Paytm, Google Pay, PhonePe – all on the same network. Wah!
K
Kavya N
From 30 million to 400 million users in 7 years! 🤯 This is probably the fastest adoption of any technology in human history. And it's not just in cities. Last week I saw a farmer in MP buying seeds using UPI. This is what 'antyodaya' looks like in the 21st century.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50