menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Europe payment link mustn’t be hobbled

12 12
yesterday

India and the European Central Bank have entered the “realisation phase” of linking the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) with Europe’s TARGET Instant Payment Settlement (TIPS) system, in a rare moment where regulators are making life meaningfully easier for consumers. If implemented effectively, this will transform how millions of Indians in Europe send money home, how tourists pay abroad, and how small businesses transfer funds across borders. But as with every major digital-policy breakthrough, the promise will only hold if re gulators re sist the temptation to add new layers of fees, friction, and red tape. For years, cross-border payments have been a stubborn outlier in the blooming digital world.

Sending money from Europe to India still results in steep bank charges, hidden foreign exchange fees, and significantly long delays. Even the most advanced fintech solutions rely on intermediaries, which drives up prices, limits transparency, and erodes consumer confidence. UPI-TIPS has the potential to change that dynamic entirely. By linking two instant payment systems, transfers can move directly between Indian and European users in real-time, without the need for a chain of correspondent banks in the middle. For consumers, the benefits are substantial. Students, workers, and families split across continents will no longer need to wait days for remittances to settle. Immediate liquidity can make an enormous difference during emergencies, and lower fees ensure that more of the sender’s money reaches the recipient.........

© The Statesman