Context:
India has officially emerged as the global leader in real-time digital payments, according to the Fast Payments Report 2025 jointly released by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and FIS Global. With a staggering 18.39 billion UPI transactions in June 2025 alone, India has outpaced both developed and emerging economies in digital payment adoption and infrastructure.
About the Report
- Published by: IMF & FIS Global
- Purpose: To benchmark digital payment systems using the Faster Payment Adoption Score (FPAS).
- Scope: Analysis of real-time payment systems across 30 countries, focusing on speed, cost, interoperability, security, and inclusivity.
Key Highlights:
Global Ranking
- Ranked #1 with an FPAS of 87.5%.
- Surpassed global leaders like Brazil, Singapore, the UK, and the US.
UPI Ecosystem Overview
- Scale: 640+ million transactions daily
- User Base: 491 million individuals & 65 million merchants
- Coverage: 675+ banks integrated into the system
- Speed & Cost: Transfers under 5 seconds; near-zero cost
International Expansion
- UPI operational in 7 countries, including France, UAE, Singapore.
- India advocating for UPI integration as a standard within BRICS+ cross-border payments.
Technological Strengths of UPI
Feature | Description |
---|---|
Interoperability | Works seamlessly across banks and apps like PhonePe, GPay, Paytm |
Inclusion & Access | Aadhaar, USSD, multilingual, and offline-lite support |
India Stack Integration | Built atop Aadhaar, eKYC, DigiLocker, and Account Aggregator |
Security | Real-time fraud detection, tokenisation, and RBI regulations |
Public–Private Partnership | NPCI + Fintechs + RBI driving resilient infrastructure |
Systemic Limitations Identified
Despite leading globally, India’s UPI framework faces several structural challenges:
- Limited Offline Access
- Heavy reliance on mobile data connectivity restricts usage in remote, low-bandwidth regions.
- Cross-Border Interoperability Gaps
- Lack of uniform infrastructure and regulation limits UPI’s global payment scalability.
- Data Privacy Concerns
- Weak enforcement of data protection laws increases the risk of financial data misuse.
- Dispute Resolution Gaps
- Unstandardized redressal mechanisms across banks and apps weaken user confidence.
- Digital Exclusion Risks
- Overdependence on smartphones marginalizes senior citizens and non-digital users.