Intentar ORO - Gratis
The hidden cost of UPI resilience
Financial Express Kochi
|August 16, 2025
India's digital scale risks undermining itself when regulatory quick fixes inadvertently shift systemic burdens onto merchants and end users alike
THE RISE OF United Payments Interface (UPI) is among India's proudest digital triumphs. However, true strength in any infrastructure is measured not by its soaring growth curves, but by how it responds when cracks begin to show. In the wake of this year's UPI outages, a consequential recalibration has begun, revealing how India's most celebrated digital public goods weigh systemic resilience against genuine consumer protection. Faced with unexpected surges in transactions and conspicuous downtimes, the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) moved swiftly to announce measures that, at first glance, seem practical and prudent.
Daily caps on balance enquiries and account list application programming interfaces, tighter limits on autopay retries, and rules steering recurring deb-its away from peak hours—all were framed as tough-love regulations to protect a backbone that handles over ₹24 lakh crore each month. However, millions of consumers and small merchants will bear the brunt as they will be forced to rewrite operational routines around what the system can actually sustain.
The irony is striking. UPI Autopay accounts for barely 0.95% of monthly traffic, with around 175 million renewals out of 18.4 billion transactions. Even the most optimistic load relief from these throttles is symbolic. Yet even a modest 5% disruption carries a heavy toll—over ₹9,600 crore in lost annual sales, nearly ₹1,700 crore in tax shortfall, and quieter blows to households whose systematic investment plan (SIP) instalments bounce or children's fees miss deadlines.
Esta historia es de la edición August 16, 2025 de Financial Express Kochi.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Financial Express Kochi
Financial Express Kochi
Tejas fighter jet crash hits India’s export ambitions
THE CRASH OF TEJAS fighter in front of global arms buyers at the Dubai Airshow is the latest blow to a key national trophy, leaving the jet reliant on Indian military orders to sustain its role as a showcase of home-built defence technology.
1 min
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
Premium for ‘experience’ widens in realty projects
Branded developers rake it in with the promise of quality
1 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
When tech comes calling
THE TUMULTUOUS CHANGES taking place in the hospitality industry in the context of AI intervention calls for recognition of the new realities for managing the business. It is not an easy task to have AI engaged at every level in the business. Traditionally managed by multitudes of grey-collared personnel, if leaders can get the human-AI partnership work for all, it could be a game-changer.
2 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
Meta pulled up for hiding mental health harm claims
US COURT FILINGS ALLEGE
3 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
Pulses imports plunge 45% in April-October
IMPORTS OF PULSES have contracted in the eight months through October as domestic production improved, reports Saikat Neogi.
1 min
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
Agritech funding plunges over profitability concerns
INDUSTRY EXPERTS EXPECT REVIVAL IN 2026
2 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
LNG import bill declines 13% to $8 bn in Apr-Oct
EXPENSE EASES
1 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
Qualcomm’s pitch for PC upgrade wave
INDIAN ENGINEERING IS at the heart of Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon X2 Elite and Extreme chips, which will power next-generation Windows PCs in the coming months.
1 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
Purple Ascent
HOW ALATE-NIGHT IDEA TURNED INTO A BEAUTY POWERHOUSE, TAKING THE PERSONAL CARE PLATFORM FROM A SIX-MEMBER LOFT OFFICE TO A DATA-DRIVEN GIANT
4 mins
November 24, 2025
Financial Express Kochi
States’ capex likely grew 10% in April-October
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE BY state governments likely grew 10% on-year in the first seven months of the current financial year, but revenue expenditure growth was a modest 4% during the period.
1 mins
November 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

