Government has good news for MasterCard, Visa and American Express
Foreign payment firms could keep copies of customer data in India while
retaining offshore storage operations, the government said, as a way to
resolve a row with MasterCard, Visa and American Express over the localisation of such information.
A decision by India's central bank in April that all payments data
should, within six months, be stored only in the country for
"unfettered supervisory access" has led to furious lobbying by global
firms that worry it would cost them millions of dollars.
India's Economic Affairs Secretary
S.C. Garg said that keeping data copies in the country had emerged as a
possible solution during a meeting with officials from the Reserve Bank
of India and executives from the payment firms.
"One of the options which emerged in that meeting was maybe mirror
copies might be a potential solution," Garg told Reuters in an interview
on Saturday.
He said the Reserve Bank of India had to take a final decision on
the matter but keeping mirror images of the data in India would mean all
the customer information would be available to local authorities.
The RBI's directive comes as more people in India are switching to
plastic, partly driven by Prime Minister Narendra Modi government's
decision to replace high-value currency notes in November 2016, since
when the government has aggressively discouraged cash transactions.
In March, Indians clocked up transactions worth $52 billion using
their 900 million credit and debit cards, nearly double the amount
recorded in November 2016, data from the RBI showed.
But rising fraud is a concern too. The RBI in April said the
payment ecosystem in India had expanded considerably, making it
necessary to ensure the safety and security of data.
Garg said the government was trying to find a consensus over data
localisation at a time of heightened scrutiny of how companies globally
handle their customers' data.
"What we do is we listen to different stakeholders, what they say,
what their stance is and where can we can find a landing zone ... That
is the reason why it was suggested to have mirror copies," he said.
Reuters previously reported that India's finance ministry has
proposed relaxing the RBI's directive following weeks of intense
lobbying by U.S. companies and trade bodies.
During the June meeting, representatives from U.S. lobby group
U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC) said that storing the data
exclusively in India would be a security risk, as in the event of a
natural disaster no-one would have access to it if it was all stored in
one place.
A STRONGER ECONOMY
Garg said India's strong economic and
fiscal performance warranted a sovereign rating upgrade by leading
rating agencies, including Standard & Poor's, and reiterated that
the economy was on course to achieve its 3.3 percent fiscal deficit
target for 2018/19.
"Of course we would want an upgrade.
There is no question. Everything (economically) is strong," he said
adding that S&P might assess India's sovereign rating next month.
In November last year, S&P
affirmed India's sovereign rating at "BBB minus" along with a stable
outlook. S&P has kept India at the lowest investment grade since
2007 while Moody's Investors Services has upgraded India's credit rating
to "Baa2", a notch higher than S&P's rating.
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