BHIM App,
Launched by PM Modi, Explained in 10 Points
HIGHLIGHTS
- PM
Modi launched the Bhim app today for simpler payments without cash
- Through
the app, you can make payments using just a phone number
- BHIM
also supports USSD payments, which work even on basic phones
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi today launched BHIM, described by him as a brand-new app
that will amount to “a world wonder.” BHIM - Bharat Interface for Money - is
named for Dr BR Ambedkar, said the PM, and is positioned to play a big role in
the government’s push for digital transactions.
"Be
it a smartphone or a feature phone of Rs 1,000-1,200, BHIM app can be used.
There is no need to have Internet connectivity," says PM Modi. "One
only needs a thumb. There was a time when an illiterate was called 'angutha
chhaap'. That has changed. Your thumb is your bank now.”
BHIM
allows customers to transact electronically without having to use a credit or
debit card, or by creating and storing a mobile wallet.
Here is your 10-point guide to BHIM:
- The app allows you to easily transfer money or make a payment
from your bank account using only your phone number. If the shopkeeper uses the
BHIM app too, just open the app, choose “send money”, and type in the amount
and the merchant's phone number to make the payment. The money will be debited
from your account, and credited to the merchant's bank account which are linked
by you and the vendor to the BHIM app.
- BHIM is now available as an Android version download now, and
iOS is coming soon.
- The app also allows you to scan a QR code. The merchant can
generate his QR code through the BHIM app. To pay him, you'd need to tap the
Scan and Pay button in the app, and then scan the QR code.
- Even without a smartphone, anyone can use BHIM to make payments.You
need to dial *99# from any kind of mobile phone, and this will show a menu - by
typing in different numbers you can choose to send money, check your balance,
or see transaction history.
- To send money, for example, you'd type '1' and hit send, then type
'1' again to select mobile number. Next, you'd type in the number and the
amount, and then a PIN that can be generated using BHIM. This will work on any
phone - even Rs. 1,000 feature phones - without an Internet connection.
- Shopkeepers can use the BHIM app and receive money from a
smartphone, or if the customer has linked a bank account and her Aadhaar ID,
then the merchant can use Aadhaar Pay, an app that was soft-launched days ago.
For this, the merchant has to have a smartphone (even a basic Android phone
will do) and a Rs. 2,000 fingerprint reader. This is currently being
distributed free in Aadhaar Payments pilot projects around the country.
- On the shopkeeper's phone, the customer types in her Aadhaar
number and chooses her bank. Then, the shopkeeper uses the fingerprint reader
for instant confirmation to complete the payment. The customer don't need to
carry her Aadhar card, or use a phone, only the merchant needs these.
- With a mobile wallet app, you have to load money in the wallet
before you can use it. With BHIM and all UPI (United Payments Interface) apps,
you can directly connect your phone to your bank account - like a debit card.
Payments are happening directly from and to bank accounts, so merchants don't
have to worry about transferring wallet earnings to the bank either.
- There is a Rs. 10,000 per transaction limit, and Rs. 20,000 per
day for BHIM.
- All UPI-connected banks accept BHIM - this includes all major
Indian banks including SBI, ICICI, Axis, and HDFC. Even banks not connected to
UPI can receive money through BHIM through IFSC, an 11-digit code assigned to
every bank branch by the Reserve Bank of India.
No comments:
Post a Comment