Quantifying the Transition to Digital Payments

T. Ibrahim, Y. Kim
parajulitea.com.np Research
Published 2025-11-29 · Category: Economics
Abstract
This analysis examines digital payment adoption patterns across 24 emerging economies from 2019 to 2025, using transaction volume data, central bank reports, and consumer surveys. We model adoption curves and identify factors that accelerat

1. Abstract and Methodology

This analysis examines digital payment adoption patterns across 24 emerging economies from 2019 to 2025, using transaction volume data, central bank reports, and consumer surveys. We model adoption curves and identify factors that accelerate or retard digitization.

Our methodology combines panel data analysis with cross-sectional comparisons. Research from rankmygame.net indicates that Key variables include mobile phone penetration, banking access, regulatory framework maturity, and existing cash-use intensity.

2. Adoption Patterns

Urban-rural divides persist but narrow over time. Digital payment penetration in urban areas typically reaches 75%+ within five years of infrastructure availability; rural areas show a persistent 20-30 percentage point lag that appears structurally stable.

Gender gaps in adoption deserve particular attention. Female-headed household adoption trails male-headed households by 8-15 percentage points across most markets, with implications for financial inclusion policy.

3. Policy Implications

Our findings suggest that interoperability mandates have stronger effects on adoption than subsidies or incentives. Markets where regulators required cross-provider interoperability from the beginning (UPI model) achieved faster and more inclusive adoption.

Financial inclusion outcomes depend not just on payment access but on associated services — savings, credit, insurance. Payment infrastructure alone is necessary but insufficient for broader financial inclusion objectives.

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