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Commentary: When digital banking fails, a tucked-away S$10 wins the day

SINGAPORE: I was travelling with my husband in Seoul for work last weekend when my teenage son pinged to let me know he urgently needed to purchase some items for a school project. The shopping list was a little more than his allowance would cater for, so we said we’d send some funds over.

Easy peasy open-app-and-find-the-payee, right? Wrong. And that was how we found out about the DBS and Citi banking services outage on Saturday (Oct 14).

The hours-long online banking and payment services outage left customers across the island stranded – and outraged. Unable to make payment via PayNow, PayLah!, NETS as well as credit cards, many found themselves stuck at petrol kiosks and car parks. Some had to abandon their shopping carts at supermarkets. DBS automated teller machines (ATM) at some locations were also affected.

This is the not first time this year DBS has faced disruptions to their online banking and payment services – it’s the third.

On Mar 29, DBS digital services were down for most of the day, with the disruption caused by “inherent software bugs“. On May 5, a human error in coding the programme that was used for system maintenance affected access to DBS online and ATM services for more than six hours.

The most recent outage was caused by a technical issue with the cooling system at a data centre used by both DBS and Citi.

Related:

DBS, Citi outage: MAS orders banks to conduct thorough investigation, supervisory actions to follow

If history is anything to go by, the response to the latest disruption will take a three-track path: Customers will complain about the inconvenience and decry the feasibility of Singapore going cashless; the banks may be made to review their operational processes and system resiliency; and the authorities may slap the infringing parties with additional requirements and demand they do better.

All of that is absolutely fair and understandable.

Undoubtedly, the banks – all of them, not just the two involved – will learn from this. Hopefully, they will build in better public relations and customer recovery, double down on redundancy systems and improve their scenario planning.

It is impossible to say when another outage will happen again. After all, no technology system is infallible.

MISSING LINK TO A BETTER CASHLESS SOCIETY?

From a larger societal roadmap to being cashless, this will be chalked up as a huge learning experience. But I wonder if the missing link to making a cashless system work better is if society – you and I – see ourselves as part of the whole digitalisation process, instead of mere consumers. 

Singapore has come a long way in its cashless journey. While the popularity of digital banking and cashless transactions only really took off in the last few years, the national campaign to minimise cash transactions started way back in 1985.

“The widespread use of electronic fund transfer systems and the acceptance of cashless transactions would usher in a new era of comfort and convenience in banking and cash management services,” said then Acting Minister for Labour Lee Yock Suan in a speech to launch the campaign on Mar 14, 1985.  “We can look forward to the day when we could do our shopping, pay our bills, check our bank accounts and transfer funds from one account to another all in the comfort of our homes.”

Related:

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The initial take-up wasn’t exactly speedy. In a study commissioned by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), KPMG found that 60 per cent of consumer payments were still being made in cash in 2015.

But by 2023, Singapore’s adoption rate of cashless payments was the highest in Southeast Asia at 97 per cent, based on payment methods at Singapore retail points-of-sale in 2022, according to a survey by German statistics company Statista.

NO WALLET, JUST A PHONE

We are far from being newcomers to digital banking, but it’s only been in recent year that there’s been a rapid surge in people adopting cashless payments for their day-to-day transactions. I know of some people who do not even carry wallets around anymore – relying solely on their phone for payments.

And while the backend infrastructure has been fortified to present some measure of robustness, we are still in our first decade where the human interest in going cashless is finally matching the plan.

As with most things, is easy to update the system. It is harder to change the human.

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