Payments, liquidity and digital solutions with GTS Westpac’s Nish Dharmaratne
In brief
- “The Australian Banking Association prepared a report around digital wallets. One of the points is that about 746 million was the total usage of digital wallets in 2018. It has gone to a staggering 93 billion by 2022.”
- “We are working with a number of institutions, particularly the biller organisations, to help them understand this is going to be the new way of collecting your receivables. This is going to be the new way of collecting—faster collection. That’s going to be a really, really interesting customer experience, end-to-end digital.”
- “The second risk, which I think is really important, is the cyber risk. That is not uncommon to any market anywhere in the world. Cybersecurity, an enhanced means of contingencies in the event of a cyber scenario, is something that the prudential regulator is very keen for all regulated entities to implement.”
Protiviti Australia’s Director Ruby Chen and Senior Director Rupesh Mahto sit down to talk to Nish Dharmaratne, Managing Director, Global Head of Product (Payments, Liquidity & Digital Solutions) at GTS, Westpac. In this interview, Dharmaratne discusses core payments, new payment solutions, cross-currency payments, corporate commercial cards, merchant acquiring, liquidity solutions, risk, regulation and more.
In this interview:
1:01 - What changes in payments are expected in the next 3-5 years?
6:25 - The customer experience as a key differentiator
10:56 - Risk, governance and regulatory standards
16:33 - Women in payments and why diversity of thought matters
Ruby chen: If you were to look at, say 2033, what do you see happening in payments? What’s possible if we get this right? And what could go wrong if we don't?
Nish Dharmaratne: Great question, Ruby! I don't have a crystal ball, but there's going to be very clear trends emerging over the next ten years. Specifically, I think all paper-based transactions—whether it is a checks or direct debits or even someone walking into a branch and filling up a one pager to do a payment—will all be gone. I think that's going to be supported by the level of automation happening in the branches.
The second trend is the increase in real-time payments but more of an overall connected lifestyle for consumers and connected commerce for corporations. Consumers will continue to demand more choices and digital ways of paying. Meanwhile, many organisations, such as utility providers and insurance services, are ready for change. I can share with you we looked at the insurance segment data recently and 50% of insurance claims are still processed via wire checks. So, there are options that we could really look at improving.
The other thing that’s very interesting to me is how much we, as an industry, are paying attention to being socially responsible in how we deliver payments. As you know, Australia still has vulnerable communities, and we need to be conscious of how products or services are accessible to those communities, as well. As we move into a more digital future, we need to be aware that not all demographics or populations are digitally savvy or have access to all technologies. We have a responsibility to take care of these communities who may not necessarily have all the access to financial services in the future.
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