UPI like open network to online shopping, food delivery or taxi cab services coming soon

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UPI like open network to online shopping, food delivery or taxi cab services coming soon:

India is set to be the first to tear down the walls around global technology giants. Entrepreneurs that helped build a new standard in affordable digital payments used locally by Alphabet, Facebook, Walmart and all the big banks, are now trying to unbundle the online market for shopping, food delivery and mobility. The initiative has the backing of IT billionaire and Infosys co-founder-turned-philanthropist Nandan Nilekani who helped design the nation’s ambitious biometric identity system, and it heralds the start of a new kind of e-commerce.

Imagine if WhatsApp or Google Maps could facilitate any web transaction. Think about ordering a taxi on the Uber app and having it fulfilled by a driver working on OLA Cabs or another aggregator. What if a restaurant could make itself simultaneously visible to users of multiple unrelated apps like Instagram or Amazon through a simple single onboarding process, and then go on to choose which delivery partner it uses to satisfy orders based on the best price and services available. And imagine if the eye-watering fees and commissions collected by technology giants from merchants and service providers were driven down to the bare minimum too.

All of this is theoretically possible with “Beckn”, a new open-access digital infrastructure that separates the consumer and provider sides of any online service so that no one platform controls the pipe between the two ends. It raises the enticing prospect of a freer, fairer web-economy as regulators around the world fret about the power amassed by big platforms. But it also allows for super-apps to thrive. That’s just as well because western technology companies operating in India certainly have grand ambitions.

Pilot programmes focusing on food and mobility, powered by Beckn, are quietly underway. Some have the backing of city authorities and powerful industry bodies like the National Restaurant Association of India, which represents the interests of over 500,000 food and beverage outlets. Some have also been supported by established companies like Mahindra Logistics, Google-backed Dunzo, and SoftBank Vision Fund-backed Delhivery. Most of these unpublicised trials started during the pandemic with the crisis giving stakeholders a sense of urgency: Beckn may emerge as 2021’s Robin Hood technology superstar.

Beckn is in its early days and may require several iterations and revisions before it takes off. But the initiative, alongside India’s individual approach to digital payments, underscores that the country is determined to set its own path in shaping the web economy rather than following models established in America or China.

Last year’s big story, apart from the Covid havoc, has been the fall from grace of top tech majors like Google and Facebook; both are facing US government anti-trust lawsuits that seek to curb their monopoly power and, in October, the US House Judiciary Committee also accused firms like Amazon and Apple of similar anti-competitive behaviour. This year’s big story, with global ramifications, is the series of Indian innovations—Bengaluru-based think-tank iSpirt is involved in several of them—that are offering solutions to the need for curbing the monopoly power of tech firms without affecting their capacity to deliver services/innovation.

The new innovations are also based on an open architecture that allows any entity to start leveraging it, provided it uses the protocols prescribed. The first such innovation to be rolled out over the next week or two, Sahay GEM, figured in the last Budget that said “an app-based invoice financing loans product will be launched (to fix) the problem of delayed payments … for the MSMEs”.

To understand how the Open Credit Enablement Network (OCEN)—the next big disruption in lending—works, recall how UPI transactions take place. UPI has a set of fintech and bank members and, based on a set of pre-defined rules or protocols, anyone can transfer money from one bank account to another with the possibility of using barcodes as well. There are already seven banks including SBI, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and Axis that are enrolled on Sahay GEM and, over time, presumably, others will enrol as well. As soon as anything is supplied on the Government e-Marketplace (GEM), the fintechs on Sahay GEM will use the invoice generated to lend to suppliers that will get to choose from all seven—for now—banks on it.

Later, OCEN will be extended to other products—30 cash-flow lending products have been identified—including GST-based lending. Unlike in a standard closed model where borrowers deal with just one bank, or only those who are members of a particular platform, OCEN is open to everyone. As in the case of UPI where users decide to use a PhonePe or a Google Pay depending upon the additional facilities these offer, this will be the clincher for OCEN as well. With so much competition and instant comparisons of the products offered by banks, this should keep lending rates competitive.

The same open principle will apply to telemedicine; Open Health Services Network (OHSN) is to be handled by the National Health Authority. As in the case of OCEN, doctors, hospitals, pathology labs, pharmacies, etc, are free to join, and patients are then free to choose whose service they want to avail. Since electronic health records are not always portable, standards will be laid down to ensure this, and a health data consent manager will ensure consent is taken and privacy maintained. For OHSN to really work well, though, will take time since a system of rating doctors and medical facilities will need to be put in place.

Equally interesting, though it is not clear how soon this will start, is the extension of the open network to online shopping, food delivery or taxi cab services. Beckn, co-founded by Aadhaar founder Nandan Nilekani, is working on open protocols that can allow, say, a restaurant to have its menu not just on a Swiggy or a Zomato but on a platform that is accessible to a wide range of persons; as journalist Una Galani puts it , “think about ordering a taxi on the Uber app and having it fulfilled by a driver working on OLA cabs or another aggregator”.*

If the move is successful, it means the large profits earned by companies who follow a closed model—one that displays only their clients’ offerings—will disappear and, instead, with a big dose of competition injected, prices will remain as low as possible. Indeed, over time, as trust rankings are developed—how do you rank Driver A and his cab?—in much the same way that people look at user reviews of products, it may even be possible to do away with the one/two-aggregator model in vogue today for a lot of services.

As in the case of UPI, you will still have firms/brands—Google Pay, PhonePe—that will find ways to differentiate their offering by adding in more frills/services, but the hope is that, as OCEN/OHSN gain traction, even existing players may want to be part of them, and that, in turn, will give them more heft. A good example of this in India is Paytm. While it was initially a wallet that was meant for its subscribers only, as UPI gained traction, Paytm too offered UPI services; you can now use the Paytm wallet and the services that it offers, and you can also be a part of the larger UPI network while using Paytm.

A key feature, to make these protocols work, needless to say, is dispute resolution. When you buy a product on Amazon, it doesn’t matter who the seller is, Amazon guarantees the good will be returned if you don’t want it; even without Amazon, you can always e-mail the seller and hope for a refund, but who will want to take a chance by placing an order with a firm you have never heard of and one not even in your city? In an open model, which no one really owns, how are returns/refunds to be done? It is early days, but one way to fix this is for the system to auto-generate a ‘fact-file’ whenever there is a dispute, and for each player to sign off on pre-agreed actions that are hard-wired into the system.

Having designed an open system to solve a monopoly problem the world is grappling with is another feather in India’s cap after its successful conceptualisation/execution of Aadhar, UPI, Digilocker, eSign, etc. In the case of UPI, the model was so successful, Google recommended that the US Fed use a UPI-based system to build a new inter-bank real-time-gross-settlement service (RTGS), and the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) recommended that other countries emulate the Indian approach. Happy New Innovations!

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Deal Lieutenant Deal Lieutenant
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Nice one.. smile

Deal Cadet Deal Cadet
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hope it becomes successful smile

Pro Entertainer Pro Entertainer
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Think about ordering a taxi on the Uber app and having it fulfilled by a driver working on OLA Cabs or another aggregator…
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Means even more lack of accountability… Very scary… eek

Analyst Analyst
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There will be more accountability because right now you dont know your driver.. But here you can get info on the driver directly without the uber filtering. If he has a lot of negative feedback you can cancel or not take him. So drivers will try ever harder to get good rec. Because you cant fudge the numbers easily and hide it. I am sure you have some kind of verification system to enter the system like your DL.. So he can change cars but his info will still show up..

Analyst Analyst
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Is there a link? I was telling my friend about something like this using blockchains where taxi drivers wont have to use uber or ola but can advertise directly and people looking for a cab can find them in their locality and also look up the drivers creditials. So both customer and driver are safe and prices can also be selected. Ofcourse there wont be easy ways to fix troubles but that would come later.. Since CS is pretty basic now anyway that wont be missed much.

Also google maps provides something like this when looking for say hotels it will show you rates and hotels available on your search.. Better than trying to find lowest rates and such using an app..

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