Taiwan’s Heavy Reliance On Non-Digitalised Payments Market Outlook: Ken Research As China leads the way into becoming the world’s first cashless economy and other countries try to catch up, Taiwan is lagging behind. According to the study, ‘Payments Landscape In Taiwan: Opportunities And Risks To 2022’, Taiwan’s e-commerce market is one of the fastest growing in Southeast Asia and is driven by the rise in internet and smartphone penetration. Behind the growth of ecommerce payments are the multiple payment methods provided by e-commerce websites including payment cards, direct debits, cash or card on delivery, bank transfer and digital and mobile wallets. Despite this, for an average person living in the country paper money and plastic bank cards are still an indispensable part of daily routine.
Cash continues to be the preferred mode of consumer payment accounting for nearly four-fifth of the overall payment transaction volume in 2016. It has been observed that consumers in Taiwan have a strong inclination towards cash for day-to-day transactions despite the gradual rise in electronic payments. Currently, in Taiwan only a proportion of the population slightly greater than one-tenth has noticeably begun using mobile payments, significantly lagging behind its Asian peers. A recent research report showed that mainland China is leading in mobile payment adoption accounting for three-fifth of the worldwide user base in 2018. India has seen a three-fourth increase in the number of users in the past two years and has become the world’s fastest growing mobile payment market. Taiwan’s slow adoption is a bitsurprising considering the fact that its economy took off decades earlier than mainland China and other South East Asian countries. On top of this, Taiwan’s smartphone penetration is one of the highest in the world and is expected to reach more than nine-tenth of the population shortly. Further, studies show that the country is not lacking any resource in order to adopt digital payments. Apart from these observations, the data also shows that nearlyfour-fifth of the population has access to mobile internet.