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Australia Plans to Combine its Primary Payment Networks

By Sarah Grotta
December 14, 2020
in Analysts Coverage, Banking, Commercial Payments, Credit, Cross-border Payments, Debit, Digital Banking, Electronic Payments, Emerging Payments, Faster Payments, Mobile Banking, Mobile Payments
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Australia Plans to Combine its Primary Payment Networks

Australia Plans to Combine its Primary Payment Networks

Admittedly, this is not new news, but in researching a report regarding debit payments in Asia, an article in ITNews from June caught my eye. Australia is considering collapsing some of its national payment networks into a single organization. The objective is to create one, unified and efficient organization that would direct where investments in payments are made. 

Australia, and other countries want their national payments capabilities to adapt more quickly and fend off competition from Tencent and Ant Group in China plus take market share from Mastercard and Visa.

The networks under consideration for consolidation includes:

  • BPAY: Financial institution based, bill pay network with online and mobile access. 
  • Eftpos: National point of sale solution
  • NPP: New Payment Platform offers real time payments domestically.

Some key points from the article:

Both the Commonwealth Bank of Australia and the ANZ Banking Group have lodged submissions with the Reserve Bank of Australia’s review of payments regulation saying the current menagerie of payments schemes and infrastructure needs to be reviewed with a view to an industry-wide platform.

Any final decision to consolidate – which is still a couple years away – would have massive ramifications for literally tens of billions of dollars of bank-owned systems initially rolled out in the 1980s, predominantly on IBM’s zSeries (or earlier) running COBOL and dozens of bespoke and proprietary legacy applications that linger to this day.

Having taken more than a decade of regulatory biffo to come to life – a core skill of Australian banking oligopoly is its capacity to disagree on any common technological innovation unless it’s forced upon institutions – the gradual but relentless growth of the NPP ultimately creates some technological redundancies.

Both BPAY and EFTPOS, which the direct entry system underpins, are the two most obvious low-cost transaction behemoths affected by any consolidation that could potentially see their functions rolled across onto the underlying NPP architecture.

And like the NPP, EFTPOS and BPAY are essentially owned by the main banks and other institutions, hence the ultimate disinclination to keep running three sets of infrastructure.

Overview by Sarah Grotta, Director, Merchant Services at Mercator Advisory Group

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Tags: Ant FinancialAustraliaChinaNPPPayments NetworkReserve Bank of AustraliaTencent

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