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Nedbank will not be charging fees on PayShap payments until the end of April 2023.

Nedbank offers PayShap payments for free until 30 April 2023

 

Nedbank has launched the PayShap rapid payment system, with a bold pricing strategy designed to drive widespread adoption. This service will be free until 30 April, and thereafter will be available for a nominal fee of R1 per transaction.

‘We are pricing PayShap aggressively because we strongly believe that it is an innovation with enormous potential to help more South Africans join the digital economy. By enabling individuals and small businesses to make cheap instant payments using their cellphones, PayShap offers the security of digital transacting with the immediacy of cash,’ says Managing Executive for Solution Innovation at Nedbank, Dayalan Govender.

‘It aligns perfectly with Nedbank’s long-held belief that digital technology has a vital role to play in helping South Africans transact more easily, safely and cost-effectively.’

PayShap is the result of a long-term industry collaboration led by BankServAfrica, the financial sector’s clearing house. It enables users to transact instantly without sharing banking details or using a banking app. Instead, instant messaging applications like WhatsApp are used to transfer money using a proxy (such as a cellphone number) for each party’s bank account or e-wallet. It aims to help eliminate the need for cash to pay smaller businesses or to exchange cash with friends or family members.

Despite South Africa’s world-class banking system, cash continues to play a huge role in the economy, with R166 billion circulating in notes and coins, and R70 billion per month flowing through ATM and branch networks. The reasons for the continued high use of cash are complex but one thing is clear – using cash is expensive and its high costs are disproportionately borne by the poor. Research by Genesis Analytics showed that cash costs consumers around R23 billion (0,52% of gross domestic product) in 2016.

These figures include the opportunity cost of using cash. For example, using cash means that individuals and small and medium-sized enterprises have no way of demonstrating their financial status, and thus find it hard to access the loans they need to fund growth. This effectively disempowers them and hobbles the economy.

FinMark Trust research shows that in Nigeria, the growth in instant payments is indeed driving financial inclusion.

‘Nedbank has been at the forefront of using technology to make it easier for South Africans to make payments and manage their finances. Our tap-on-phone service, which turns a cellphone into a card-accepting device, is a good example of the way we use technology to make life easier for our clients. PayShap is similarly innovative, because it democratises instant payments by making them both affordable and easy to use,’ he argues. ‘You could say it reproduces one of the most important attributes of cash.’

South Africans have a growing appetite for instant payments, and currently transfer about R105 billion per year in this way, even though some banks charge as much as R50 per payment. Using PayShap, anyone can transfer money instantly using a proxy like a cellphone number via a messaging application, and using it through Nedbank will be ultra-affordable. PayShap will initially handle transactions of up to R3 000.

‘By eroding the use of cash, we are helping to drive financial inclusion, because as the economy digitalises, those who primarily use cash are increasingly marginalised,’ says Govender. ‘PayShap is a significant milestone on our journey to a more inclusive and stronger economy, and Nedbank is supporting it by offering exceptionally low transaction costs.’

For more information about Nedbank’s PayShap offering, read here: https://personal.nedbank.co.za/learn/blog/payshap-new-payment-method-fast-as-cash.html

Advertorials - Date: 04 April 2023

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