Throughout the past decade, the rapid proliferation of mobile payment solutions has been a key enabler for growing digital economies across Asia and beyond. The robust growth of mobile payments has attracted attention from major players from numerous industries, leading to a more intricate and collaborate ecosystem. Established financial institutions, fintech innovators, policymakers, and even the merchants and consumers themselves have collectively contributed to the evolution of the digital payment space.
Building on our 2020 report, ‘The Next Wave: Emerging digital life in South and Southeast Asia’, which explores the emerging digital life in South and Southeast Asia, this paper examines new policy, industrial and technological developments over the past four years in the Asia Pacific region. Governments’ initiatives to develop digital economies, as well as public-private collaboration in modernizing payment infrastructure, has helped to install fast payment systems and national QR code schemes. Accelerating cross-border commerce has spurred the demand for global and regional payment interoperability. Meanwhile, to meet customers’ growing preferences for an omnichannel shopping experience, e-wallets have expanded beyond just payments to now incorporate a suite of services through mini apps. All these factors have contributed to the checkout revolution, as the checkout moment no longer serves as the end of customer journey but opens up new possibilities for a much more extended and varied consumer engagement and outreach journey.
Amid the constantly evolving cross-border checkout revolution, we have identified four key trends:
The fast-growing and changing payment landscape has also increased the threat of fraud and financial crime. Fraudsters are constantly adapting their techniques and weaponizing new technologies to exploit vulnerabilities in the payment ecosystem, particularly when cross-border payment reforms are rapidly carried out. Concerns over financial crime are further heightened as more MSMEs deepen digitalization while having limited resources allocated to cybersecurity. Industry-wide collaboration and public-private partnerships will be paramount to carrying out cooperative, pragmatic approaches to bring fintech innovations and digitalization to fruition and to drive long-term social impact.