Finextra: Industry association pushes back on EC instant payments timeline
        
            27 October 2022
        
        Industry association Payments Europe has raised concerns about the EC's plan for the mandatory provision of instant credit transfers in euros, arguing that the tight timeframe could "endanger the safety and security" of transactions. 
        
        
        
            
	The EC today confirmed that it is planning to make instant payments in 
euros available to all citizens and businesses holding a bank account in
 the EU and in EEA countries. The proposal aims to ensure that instant 
payments in euro are affordable and secure, boosting convenience for 
consumers while improving cash flow and ensuring cost savings for 
businesses.
Mairead McGuinness, commissioner for financial 
services, financial stability and Capital Markets Union, says: "Moving 
from “next day” transfers to “ten seconds” transfers is seismic and 
comparable to the move from mail to e-mail. Yet today, nearly nine out 
of ten credit transfers in euro are still processed as traditional 
‘slow' transfers. 
"There is no reason why many citizens and 
businesses in the EU are not able to send and receive money immediately,
 the technology to provide for instant payments has been in place since 
2017. 
"This facility to send and receive money in seconds is 
particularly important at a time when bills for households and SMEs are 
increasing and every cent counts. This initiative will directly benefit 
EU citizens and businesses."
Under the proposal, PSPs in the euro
 area that already offer credit transfers in euros will have six months 
to also offer their instant version for receiving and 12 months for 
sending.
However, Payments Europe, while welcoming the 
commission's efforts on instant payments, says that the six month 
timeframe is "too narrow and could endanger the safety and security of 
transactions".
In contrast, the Open Finance Association has 
offered full-throated support for the plans, with chair Nilixa Devlukia 
saying: "We are very encouraged to read the Commission’s proposal, which
 understands that instant payments must be available to every European. 
They cannot be a premium feature, offered at a high cost to only a small
 number of consumers, as they are today."
The European trade 
association of bank-independent Third Party Providers also hailed the 
proposal, particularly its insistence that that the price charged for 
instant payments in euro does not exceed the price charged for 
traditional, non-instant credit transfers.
Says the association: 
"This is crucial to ensure that the true benefits of instant payments 
can be made available to all EU consumers."
Tom Greenwood, CEO 
and founder of global instant payments gateway Volt believes the rule 
change will be a boon to the open banking industry. "Until today only 
circa 50% of banks in the EU have implemented instant payments (via SEPA
 Instant). This leaves the other 50% opting out of instant payments, and
 creates significant barriers to the development and adoption of open 
banking, to the detriment of consumers and businesses.
"This is 
all now set to change, with tremendous impact for open banking payments 
adoption, unlocking new use cases for account-to-account payments, 
including in physical in-store retail settings. By mandating instant 
payments, the biggest blockers to open banking payments becoming 
mainstream are instantly solved."
Finextra
        
        
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