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Thailand's Cashless Leap: Ahead of the Asean Pack by 2028


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Thailand is on track to outpace its Southeast Asian neighbours in becoming a cashless society, propelled by a rapid uptake in digital payment methods. A recent survey by Visa, a global payment service giant, indicates that Thailand could transition to a cashless economy as early as 2028, beating the broader ASEAN timeline by a few years.

 

Visa's Consumer Payment Attitude Study highlights that 22% of Thai respondents expect a cashless transition by 2028, higher than the ASEAN average of 16%. Pushing the agenda further, Thailand ranks third in the region for minimising cash use, with only 47% of wallet contents being physical cash, just behind Vietnam and Malaysia.


The national platform, PromptPay, appears at the heart of this shift, having significantly driven digital payment adoption, particularly notable after the pandemic. The increase in electronic transactions has also been facilitated by widespread smartphone use. In fact, a staggering 97% of Thais report weekly usage of mobile banking apps, leading peers in the region.

 

Mr Punnamas Vichitkulwongsa, Visa Thailand's country manager, acknowledged that although PromptPay has enhanced digital financial interactions and supported Visa business, its success has also challenged Visa’s traditional debit card operations. With a post-pandemic rise in debit card cancellations, Visa plans to combat this with new technologies like the Click-to-Pay system, slated for launch next year.

 

Furthermore, Thailand leads the regional charge in real-time payment (RTP) adoption, with 86% of respondents engaging in RTP activities weekly. This reflects a growing trust in digital transactions across the nation, reported Bangkok Post.

 

Despite these advancements, household debt levels and limited access to credit facilities mean debit cards still play a crucial role in many Thai consumers' digital payment landscapes. Visa intends to bridge these gaps while reinforcing card security for the future.

 

TOP Picture courtesy: Sanook 

 

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-- 2024-10-05


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this Bar Code  Scan me things is beyond me....  friend set me up on my Smartphone, long ago + instructions,  cannot work it out 

 

friend set me up with ''Line'  also long ago + beyond me, no matter how often over the past years have tried just cannot get past or make the scan me Barcode work.

 

Seeing as most people of all ages have there head buried in the phones, amazes me how long some take to try to make the scan me payment at Makro

 

going cashless = NO, is OK for the younger people that understand and can remember what to do,  

 

 

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3 minutes ago, ignis said:

this Bar Code  Scan me things is beyond me....  friend set me up on my Smartphone, long ago + instructions,  cannot work it out 

 

friend set me up with ''Line'  also long ago + beyond me, no matter how often over the past years have tried just cannot get past or make the scan me Barcode work.

 

Seeing as most people of all ages have there head buried in the phones, amazes me how long some take to try to make the scan me payment at Makro

 

going cashless = NO, is OK for the younger people that understand and can remember what to do,  

 

 

 

How sad, the only person in Thailand who cannot use scan to make a payment and the only person in Thailand who cannot use LINE (you should try again, using LINE will save you on telephone calls, can be free on LINE to anywhere in the world, also easy to do video chat also can be free to anywhere in the world).

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1 hour ago, Yagoda said:

Cambodia is cashless to the point that virtually everyone is equipped to pay with phones to ABA or ACLEDA Banks, among others. Scan QR and bingo. 

Except visitors, tourists and older folk.

But the scam centres in Cambodia love those that pay with phones.

No 1 target.

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1 hour ago, scorecard said:

 

How sad, the only person in Thailand who cannot use scan to make a payment and the only person in Thailand who cannot use LINE (you should try again, using LINE will save you on telephone calls, can be free on LINE to anywhere in the world, also easy to do video chat also can be free to anywhere in the world).

No not the only one, friend in the Village much younger than me is only 60 has no idea, or his wife retired yesterday has a problem try to make it work, there Son 20's can but has a problem when trying to use my phone... 2 others in the Village that I know both in there 80's also have no idea

Likewise trying to pay bills with SCB, [scan bill] even taken phone into the Bank and they cannot make it work, Works on Bangkok Bank, but use SCB for everyday uses...  maybe is my phone ? but is Android 10

 

Maybe the phone ? don't use much as far to small cannot see - much easier on my 32" PC Monitor

 

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20 minutes ago, Tropicalevo said:

Except visitors, tourists and older folk.

But the scam centres in Cambodia love those that pay with phones.

No 1 target.

Well the fact that there are idiots that get scammed shouldnt affect how I run my life. After all, there are cash scammers too.

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3 minutes ago, Yagoda said:

Well the fact that there are idiots that get scammed shouldnt affect how I run my life. After all, there are cash scammers too.

I guess you won't be letting us know if you happen to get scammed.

 

What makes you think you are invulnerable?

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I am currently in Hong Kong and surprised to see a lot of shops and restaurants saying no cash.

 

I was also surprised to see that using my Kasikorn debit card I can just touch it on the receptacles in places like McDonald’s and 7-Eleven and pay direct from my bank. Uber taxi from my bank too, I think you could live cashless here quite easily.

 

You probably think when you make a digital transaction in Thailand to pay for something that the exchange is simply between your bank and the vendor, that’s not the case, your data is also stored centrally by the government in a data lake that can be analyzed by AI.

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I explain the concept of a programmable CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency) to people and get a blank stare. Almost nobody understands the concept the WEF and many governments are about to force on us. Everyone thinks it's just a debit card or a phone app to make life easier.

 

A CBDC is the ultimate form of totalitarian control. Your programmable "money" will be far worse than prison scrip or WWII ration cards.

 

They won't need any type of physical or legislative force to control you.

 

The first thing they'll do is attach carbon credits to every purchase. You'll try to buy a steak or diesel - sorry, you've used up this month's allocation. Or try to buy an airline ticket - sorry you've already used up your credits, but they can be "banked", so in seven years you will have enough for that trip to Thailand.

 

They'll also make your credits appreciate or depreciate depending on fiscal need - sir, you're not spending enough and we need to boost consumption. We'll devalue your credits by 10% each month if you don't meet the spending requirements.

 

CBDC's and the 15 minute city. Welcome to dystopia. :coffee1:

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