International Finance
Banking

Card-based payments might double in Cambodia by 2022

cambodia, card payment, electronic payment, merchant outlet, banking infrastructure, Cambodian Shared Switch, Fast and Secure Transfer payment, Visa, Mastercard
The Cambodian government and the National Bank of Cambodia have modified the financial infrastructure in the country. As a first step, card payments will become more frequent

Cash still plays dominant role in Cambodia, primarily due to a high percentage of unbanked population, inadequate banking infrastructure, limited public awareness of electronic payments, and low acceptance of payment cards at merchant outlets.

GlobalData’s latest report, ‘Payments Landscape in Cambodia: Opportunities and Risks to 2022’, reveals that currently the use of payment cards is mostly limited to cash withdrawals at ATMs, with little use for payments at merchant outlets.

Kartik Challa, Payments Analyst for GlobalData, explains: “One of the major challenges to the growth of card-based payments in Cambodia is the practice of charging additional fees in the form of surcharges by merchants.”

However, international scheme providers such as Visa and Mastercard, along with commercial banks, are educating customers and merchants of the benefits of card-based payments and are working to remove the practice of surcharging.

To enhance the existing payment infrastructure, the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) launched its Fast and Secure Transfer (FAST) payment system in July 2016. Currently, it is supported by 31 major banks as well as several microfinance institutions. A year later, NBC launched Cambodian Shared Switch (CSS), a shared system that enables individuals to perform various interbank transactions.

The report states that the Cambodian payment card market is dominated by debit cards, which accounted for 95.6% (2.1 million) in terms of the number of cards in circulation and 65% of the total card payments by value in 2018. The overall card payments transaction value is forecasted to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 20% from KHR1.28 trillion ($318.1 million) in 2018 to KHR2.65 trillion ($659.7 million) in 2022.

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