Transformation of the Digital Payment Ecosystem in India: A Case Study of Paytm

Abstract

Paytm is a payment app in India providing e‐wallet services; it is also the most prominent mobile e‐commerce app in the world’s third‐largest economy. This article uses Paytm as a case study to better understand the global platform economy and its implications for social and economic inequities. We contextualize the emergence of Paytm by drawing attention to its relationship with India’s developing digital infrastructure and marginalized populations—many of whom are part of the platform’s user base. We use a political economy lens to investigate Paytm’s market structure, stakeholders, innovations, and beneficiaries. Our research is guided by the question: What resources, infrastructures, and policies have given rise to India’s digital payment ecosystem, and how have these contributed to economic and social inequities? Accordingly, we audited the international and Indian business press and Paytm’s corporate communications from 2016 to 2020. Our analysis points to the tensions between private and public interests in the larger platform ecosystem, dispelling notions of platforms as neutral arbiters of market transactions. We argue that Paytm is socially beneficial to the extent that it reduces transaction costs and makes digital payments more accessible for marginalized populations; it is detrimental to the time that it jeopardizes user data and privacy while suppressing competition in the platform economy.

Description

This article is part of the issue “Expanding the Boundaries of Digital Inclusion: Perspectives From Network Peripheries and Non‐Adopters” edited by Rob McMahon (University of Alberta), Nadezda Nazarova (Nord University Business School), and Laura Robinson (Santa Clara University).

Keywords

digital wallet, financial inclusion, multi‐sided market, network effects, platforms

Citation

Bhatia-Kalluri, A., & Caraway, B. (2023). Transformation of the Digital Payment Ecosystem in India: A Case Study of Paytm. Social Inclusion, 11(3), 320-331.

DOI

10.17645/si.v11i3.6687

ISSN

2183-2803

Creative Commons

Attribution 4.0 International

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