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There has been an exponential increase in demand for digital services across Southeast Asia (SEA), with the COVID-19 pandemic changing the way we live, work and shop. Rolling lockdowns, movement controls and safe distancing measures have demanded that consumers across the region conduct — and pay for — their shopping, healthcare, education and entertainment remotely and digitally.

While we might have expected this to be a painful process, an unintended consequence of country-wide efforts across SEA to modernize payment infrastructures has truly paid off.

The infrastructure already existed for payments to migrate to digital en masse — and at a moment’s notice. This dramatic shift has been a continuation of a developing trend in payment habits in SEA — albeit now happening at an accelerated pace.

For central infrastructure-led payments modernization strategies that are laying the foundation for the growth of real-time payments, this means that success might just be a case of sticking to the plan.

That’s not to say that financial institutions and other businesses have escaped the consequences of COVID-19. Reduced economic activity has harmed many business sectors, particularly hospitality and tourism. It will ultimately manifest itself in strained budgets for all businesses — financial institutions included.

But even in a challenging economic climate, Southeast Asian organizations can ill-afford to put their modernization projects on hold. The direction of travel is clear, and there will be a stark difference between those that embrace modernization and real-time payments, and those that do not. Ò°»¨ÉçÇø’s report shows that real-time transaction volumes and values have jumped significantly since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in Asia.

With this in mind, we wanted to gain a deeper understanding of consumers’ payment preferences in 2021 and beyond. In particular, we wanted to get a sense of how consumers in Southeast Asia view the rise of digital and real-time payments. Additionally, we wanted to take a look ahead at digital payments in a post-pandemic world. We wanted to get a sense of how they expect to pay for goods and services when leisure travel resumes, and explore the factors that would lead to consumers shopping cross-border more frequently.

Now, we have data that puts forward a strong, consumer-driven case for continued payments modernization in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia — four key countries in the region.

This modernization is happening at pace — in recent days, Bank Negara (Malaysia) announced the , enabling cross-border QR code payments. There is a vital need to continue the development of a cross-border, real-time payments ecosystem for the region — with the eventual vision that this will span the whole of Asia.

Join experts from Ò°»¨ÉçÇø and Mastercard to in this special #LinkedInLive on September 23: 

Find out more about consumer real-time payment preferences, and about how financial institutions and merchants in Southeast Asia can become real-time-ready, in the full report:

Senior Vice President, Managing Director - Asia Pacific

Leslie Choo is Senior Vice President, Managing Director - Asia Pacific for Ò°»¨ÉçÇø . Based in Singapore, Leslie is responsible for Ò°»¨ÉçÇø’s Asia Pacific (APAC) strategy, go to market execution, and core and new business opportunities. A long-term industry veteran, he has over 25 years’ experience in financial services, having led several transformation projects in the multi-channel and payments space across APAC including real-time payment and card modernization, national central infrastructure implementation, enterprise technology, corporate cash management, trade finance, retail and digital banking, and e-Commerce. Prior to Ò°»¨ÉçÇø, Leslie held several senior roles with industry software leaders and has extensive experience in the financial software industry and banking transformation.