SYLLABUS
GS-3: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment.
Context: The Reserve Bank of India has released Payments Vision 2028, outlining a strategic roadmap to strengthen India’s digital payments ecosystem up to December 2028.
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• The Vision document, themed “Shaping India’s Payment Frontier”, marks a transition from expanding access to deepening trust, resilience, and global integration in payment systems.
• India currently accounts for nearly half of global real-time digital transactions, positioning itself as a global leader in digital payment infrastructure.
• Accordingly, the focus has shifted towards:
- Strengthening user trust and safety.
- Enhancing operational resilience and cybersecurity.
- Improving cross-border payment efficiency.
- Promoting ease of doing business and innovation.
• The Vision also emphasises financial inclusion, global competitiveness, and technological adaptability, including the use of AI-driven systems and data-led monitoring.
About RBI’s Payments Vision 2028
• It is a strategic blueprint for the structured development of India’s payment and settlement systems, anchored around user empowerment, safety, innovation, and efficiency.
• It builds on earlier roadmap documents issued periodically since 2001, with the previous vision covering up to 2025.
• The framework has been prepared through stakeholder consultations and outlines 15 targeted initiatives to be implemented over the next three years (2025–2028).
Key Initiatives
• User Empowerment & Fraud Prevention: Introduction of a universal switch on/off facility across all digital payment modes.
- Proposal for a shared responsibility framework where both issuer and beneficiary banks share liability in unauthorised transactions.
• MSME & Financial Ecosystem Support: Full interoperability of Trade Receivables Discounting Systems (TReDS).
- Expansion to export MSMEs and factoring mechanisms.
• Payments Infrastructure Innovation: Introduction of Payments Switching Service (PaSS) for seamless migration of payment instructions during bank switching or mergers.
- Development of an open and interoperable card ecosystem.
• Cheque System Modernisation: Review of cheque design and security standards.
- Exploration of electronic cheques (e-cheques) combining reliability with digital efficiency.
• Cross-Border Payments Reform: Comprehensive review of global payment frameworks to improve speed, cost, and transparency.
- Streamlining authorisation under the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007, and the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999.
- Proposal for a single-window approval mechanism.
• Regulation & Innovation: Recognition of Small Payment System Providers (SPSPs) under a perpetual regulatory sandbox.
- Expansion of regulatory ambit to include critical ecosystem players (e.g., fintechs, intermediaries).
- Introduction of Domestic Legal Entity Identifier (DLEI) for better risk tracking.
• Technology, Data & Cybersecurity: Establishment of AI-enabled payments data frameworks.
- Implementation of Cyber Key Risk Indicators (KRI) for early risk detection.
- Strengthening research, training, and global collaboration.
Significance
• Strengthens Trust & Safety: Enhances consumer confidence through fraud control mechanisms, shared liability, and transaction-level user controls.
• Boosts MSMEs & Credit Access: TReDS interoperability improves liquidity and financing access, especially for small businesses and exporters.
• Enhances Global Integration: Streamlined cross-border systems position India as a key player in international payment networks.
• Promotes Innovation & Competition: Regulatory sandbox and open ecosystems encourage fintech participation and technological advancements.
• Improves System Resilience: Cybersecurity frameworks and regulatory expansion ensure stability amid rapid digitalisation.
• Drives Digital Economy Growth: By making payments more secure, efficient, and inclusive, it supports India’s ambition to remain a global leader in digital payments.
