The Philippines has emerged as a notable example of successful digital payment transformation without relying on a dominant super app or a retail Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).
Instead, the country focused on building an open and interoperable payment infrastructure that enables banks, digital wallets, and financial institutions to connect through shared payment networks.
Key components of this ecosystem include:
- InstaPay for real-time fund transfers
- PESONet for larger batch transactions
- QR Ph, a national QR payment standard
This approach allowed private fintech providers such as GCash and Maya to compete on user experience while operating on the same underlying infrastructure.
As a result, digital payments exceeded 50% of retail transaction volume in 2023 and reached 57.4% in 2024. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) expects digital payments to account for 60–70% of transactions by 2028.
The Philippine model highlights an important lesson for emerging economies: digital transformation can be accelerated through open standards, interoperability, and competition rather than through a single dominant platform.
For businesses and policymakers, the case demonstrates how shared digital infrastructure can improve financial inclusion, increase efficiency, reduce transaction friction, and create a more connected digital economy.
Source:Gulf News