The time to waive service fees on electronic fund transfers is long overdue, Senate President Chiz Escudero said in backing the move of Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to remove such charges for personal transactions and payments to micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs).
“I could only hope that the thresholds will be higher and the coverage wider, to benefit more consumers, and expand further the user base of digital payments,” Escudero said.
While the transaction fee on each fund transfer is dismissed by some as negligible, the veteran legislator said that “if you add them up, say a year’s worth, the amount could be substantial”.
Citing regulator reports, the seasoned lawmaker noted that individual transactions billed by one firm could reach as high as P75, while some charge senders as much as P600.
“Parang alkansya ‘yan. Maaaring barya-barya lang ang naihuhulog pero ‘di mo namamalayan na ang laki na pala ng ipon.”
“Parang alkansya ‘yan. Maaaring barya-barya lang ang naihuhulog pero ‘di mo namamalayan na ang laki na pala ng ipon,” the senator said.
With the rapid growth in the utilization of digital payments and electronic fund transfers, “new and appropriate regulations must also pick up speed. These cannot be behind the curve,” he stressed.
Share of digital payments to total retail payment transactions in the country exploded to close to 53 percent last year, beating the BSP’s expectations.
“Ang bilang ng monthly transactions ng mga bagay na pinamili ay mahigit-kumulang na 2.6 bilyon sa taong 2023. Ibig sabihin ay nasa 3.6 milyon na transactions ang nangyayari bawat oras. ‘Yan ang snapshot ng migration natin toward digital payments,” Escudero noted.
He said the logic behind the call to collect no fees on person-to-person digital money transfers for personal, family, or household purposes is “solid and unassailable.”
“Kung ang paggamit ng electronic money channels ay resonable sa dalas at halaga ng perang pinapadala, dapat zero na talaga ‘yan,” Escudero pointed out.
“Zero fees must be imposed on digital payments to small businesses.”
“It is in the same vein that zero fees must be imposed on digital payments to small businesses,” he said.
“If we want to build our economy from the ground up, this is where these firms are, grassroots and community entrepreneurs, whose cost of doing business will be reduced with the move to zero fees on digital payments,” Escudero added.
“Above all, this is the kind of incentive that will not cost the government a single centavo,” he concluded.