The Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan is an early adopter of a central bank digital currency (CBDC). Kazakhstan’s central bank expects benefits in using a CBDC for cross-border trade (especially with China), for more efficient deliverance of funds for social services, for fighting corruption and for establishing transparency of government disbursements. It also wishes to expand the global acceptance of its national currency, the Kazakhstani tenge.
Payment software specialist OpenWay, which has operated in Kazakhstan for more than 20 years, recently partnered with three card issuing clients, as well as with Visa and Mastercard, to support issuance of the first credit and debit cards tied to digital tenge currency.
Another OpenWay customer, National Payment Corporation (NPC), Kazakhstan’s central switch for routing card transactions, led the development of the digital tenge for card products.
Banks are able to open consumer and commercial digital tenge Visa and Mastercard card accounts. Card payments at POS terminals involve real-time conversion from digital tenge to fiat tenge. Banks are also able to offer cash withdrawals from digital tenge accounts at ATMs.
NPC’s digital tenge platform was developed on Corda’s R3 open permissioned distributed ledger technology (DLT) platform. Every bank, as well as NPC, connects via an API to Corda’s R3 platform to manage DLT accounts.
Instead of a direct integration between Corda and the Visa and Mastercard networks, NPC and four digital tenge card issuing banks leverage their existing interfaces to access the card networks. Three of those banks – Eurasian Bank, Altyn Bank and Halyk Bank – use OpenWay’s Way4 software.
Kazpost, Kazakhstan’s postal service, also an OpenWay Way4 customer, issues digital tenge vouchers for uses such as school meals.
National Payment Corporation decided early in its CBDC card project to collaborate with Visa and Mastercard rather than develop a domestic-only payment system because it wanted to facilitate cross-border spending of the digital tenge.
The first card purchase made using a digital tenge was on a Visa card issued by Eurasian Bank in November 2023. All three of OpenWay’s bank customers involved in Kazakhstan’s CBDC project – Eurasian Bank, Altyn Bank and Halyk Bank – have issued digital tenge cards either as virtual-only products and/or with physical cards. Those three banks also acquire card payments from merchants using OpenWay software.
National Payment Corporation publishes results of its projects annually in December. In the month between the card’s first use in November and the publication of NPC’s reporting, there were 1,714 digital tenge card transactions. The majority of those transactions came from customers of Eurasian Bank and Altyn Bank, which both support not only in-store but also ecommerce payments for digital tenge cards.
Source: NILSON REPORT, June 2024, Issue 1266