Industry Leaders Demand Fair Competition
Major technology players including Amazon and Meta are joining forces with other fintech innovators to lobby India’s payments regulator. The group is challenging the entrenched positions of PhonePe and Google Pay within the nation’s rapidly expanding Unified Payments Interface (UPI) network.
Controlled By A Few, Demanding Transparency
Executives from Amazon Pay, WhatsApp, CRED, MobiKwik, and Flipkart’s Super.money are set to engage with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) this Thursday. The NPCI, which administers the UPI platform processing billions of transactions monthly, finds itself at a crossroads between maintaining stability and addressing concentrated market control.
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Delayed Regulations Favoring Market Leaders
Over a year ago, plans to limit any single UPI app’s share to 30% by December 31, 2026, were deferred. This postponement has allowed PhonePe and Google Pay to consolidate their dominance, accounting for roughly 80% of the 22.6 billion transactions recorded in March. For fintech competitors such as Paytm, Super.money, CRED, Amazon Pay, and MobiKwik, this imbalance not only stifles innovation but also raises questions about equitable market access.
A Call For Regulatory Intervention
During the upcoming meeting, representatives from these platforms intend to highlight concerns over user acquisition strategies, product design, and monetization practices within the UPI ecosystem. They advocate for imposed restrictions on user onboarding processes, enhanced transparency in data handling, and fair access to critical features, including autopay and payment mandates. Additionally, they are seeking targeted regulatory incentives to level the playing field for emerging players.
Finding A Balance Between Innovation And Regulation
While these measures could potentially disrupt the dominance of established players, the NPCI operates under the close supervision of the Reserve Bank of India. Previous attempts to curb market concentration without undermining service accessibility for hundreds of millions have met with limited success. As the debate intensifies, the meeting may serve as a pivotal moment for both regulators and industry stakeholders in recalibrating the competitive dynamics of India’s instant payment ecosystem.
The Road Ahead
The outcome of this high-stakes discussion remains uncertain. However, the concerted efforts by leading digital payment providers signal a broader industry push toward a more inclusive and balanced market structure. As the UPI network continues to underpin the financial transactions of millions, the implications of this meeting could resonate across the global fintech landscape.
NPCI, along with representatives from Amazon and Meta, have yet to comment on the proposals, leaving the market to watch closely as regulatory deliberations unfold.







