Merchant Incentives Are Still Misaligned
Digital payment systems succeed when they solve a merchant’s problem rather than create one.
For many Pakistani merchants, however, digital payments introduce multiple new complications:
Settlement delays that may push payments to the next business day.
Administrative requirements such as merchant account registration.
Transaction fees that reduce already narrow profit margins.
Dispute processes that may freeze funds during investigation.
In contrast, cash transactions close instantly and definitively.
Until digital payment systems provide clear, measurable advantages over cash, merchants will continue choosing the simpler option.
The Fragmented Fintech Ecosystem
Pakistan’s fintech sector has grown rapidly, yet interoperability remains limited. Mobile wallets, banks, and payment gateways often operate within partially isolated systems that require complex integrations.
Integration efforts between fintech providers can sometimes take months rather than days, slowing innovation and discouraging smaller technology companies from building new services.
Many industry observers argue that Pakistan requires a national unified payment interface similar to India’s UPI, where multiple banks and fintech companies operate through a single interoperable network. Such systems drastically reduce friction by allowing payments across institutions with minimal complexity.
Pakistan’s 1LINK infrastructure already demonstrates the value of interoperability through ATM networks. Expanding this concept into a real-time digital payment switch could dramatically accelerate adoption.
