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Express ACH Direct Credit recorded a 51 percent growth in its volume of transactions in the first quarter of this year compared to the same period in 2019, according to the first quarter product performance report by the Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement Systems (GhIPSS).

Express ACH Direct Credit recorded a total of 286,516 transactions from January to March this year compared to 189,587 for the same period in 2019. This points to increasing public preference for payment systems that offer them faster access to their funds. ACH Direct Credit is an electronic form of transferring funds from one bank account to another. A regular Direct Credit transfer is effected between 24 and 48 hours, however, an express Direct Credit is effected the same day, once the request is made before 10 O’clock in the morning.
 
The over 50 percent growth in Express ACH is significantly higher than the 12 percent growth that the regular ACH Direct Credit recorded during the first quarter of this year. It is also better than the 3 percent drop in the volume of cheque transactions. The growth in the volume of Express ACH Direct Credit follows a similar growth pattern in payment channels such as GhIPSS Instant Pay and Mobile Money, all of which offer faster access to transferred funds.
 
The world is gravitating towards faster access to funds or real-time payments with many banks and FinTechs streamlining traditional banking services to build their business models around real-time payments.
 
The Chief Executive of GhIPSS Archie Hesse suggested that changing lifestyle, technology and in particular the prevalence of smartphones are some of the reasons why the preference for faster or real-time payments keep rising. He explained that GhIPSS is in tune with the trend and will continue to develop payment solutions that meet what he described as “the instant economy”.
 

GhIPSS earlier this year launched the universal QR code and the Proxy Pay, both of which are in line with faster and real-time payments. Mr Hesse hinted and many products have been lined up to add on to the existing list of real-time payment channels.

VSN 0806Many schools in Ghana require parents and students to pay their fees at various bank branches before, in some cases, continuing the process online. This is generally considered an improvement from the days when cash was paid at the accounts and cash offices of schools.

But the Chief Executive Officer of Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement Systems (GhIPSS), Mr. Archie Hesse, said in an interview that the current system leaves much to be desired. He is of the view that parents and students should be able to pay their school fees electronically without visiting any bank branch.
Mr. Hesse is therefore challenging Fintech companies in the country to interface with the schools and their banks to provide opportunities for the public to pay school fees electronically; either using money from their bank accounts or mobile money wallet.

Ghana has made steady progress in its electronic payment infrastructure since 2007, introducing a number of electronic payment channels. Mr. Hesse argued that the current payment infrastructure creates opportunities for Fintech companies to device various solutions to address the public’s needs. He is particularly interested in seeing an end to the incidence of parents and students queuing-up at banking halls to pay school fees, when they can perform the same transaction from their mobile phones and computers.

The country has a burgeoning Fintech industry providing various technology-enabled financial solutions. In addition to the work being done, the GhIPSS CEO wants the Fintechs to address the school fees paying challenge as well.

He explained that payment remains a gap in the online admission processes of many schools. “A number of tertiary, secondary and even basic schools now allow their students to process admissions online; but the beauty of the great idea is defeated when payments must be physically made at bank branches. The Fintechs must get in there and close that gap.

Mr. Hesse said Ghana has some fantastic Fintech companies and hopes that some of them will develop and popularise suitable solutions, so that paying school fees electronically becomes the norm. He argued that once the school fees aspect is addressed, it will snowball to other everyday payments that are done manually.
He urged heads of educational institutions to engage the services of Fintechs, and together with their bankers find electronic payment solutions to address the challenge.

The GhIPSS CEO noted that electronic payment of fees, levies, taxes, fines and other such payments enhances transparency, provides an audit trail, reduces cost and provides better customer service. He explained that electronic payment is a great business proposition that not only save money for the institutions which use it, but should also be seen as a tool for better customer service.

Source: thebftonline.com

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