India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI) is no longer just a domestic success story. In a seismic shift for global finance, 50 nations have now agreed to adopt or integrate with UPI, the real-time payment system that has revolutionised digital transactions in India. This move signals a new era of digital sovereignty and financial inclusion, but it also raises pressing questions about data privacy, geopolitical influence, and the ethics of exporting a payment infrastructure that has been both lauded and scrutinised.
UPI’s rise in India has been nothing short of meteoric. From humble beginnings in 2016, it now processes over 10 billion transactions per month, enabling seamless bank-to-bank transfers via mobile phones. Its architecture is elegantly simple: a single interface that connects multiple bank accounts, using a virtual payment address (VPA) instead of cumbersome account numbers. For a nation with over 1.4 billion people and a smartphone revolution, UPI was a game-changer. Now, the technology is being exported.
The expansion is being spearheaded by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), which has signed agreements with countries across Asia, Africa, South America, and the Middle East. Key adopters include Singapore, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Mauritius, and several African nations such as Ghana and Rwanda. Each will either build their own UPI-like system using the same open-source protocols or directly integrate UPI into their existing digital payment networks. The promise is lower transaction costs, faster settlements, and a boon for the unbanked.
But as a Silicon Valley expat who has seen the dark side of technology, I cannot help but feel a twinge of unease. UPI is not just a payment system; it is a data engine. Every transaction generates metadata that can be analysed, monetised, and potentially weaponised. In India, the government’s push for digital payments has been accompanied by a lack of robust data protection laws, and the recent Personal Data Protection Bill has yet to be fully implemented. What safeguards will these 50 nations have? Will they be able to maintain digital sovereignty, or will they become dependent on Indian technology and, by extension, Indian regulatory oversight?
There is also the question of surveillance. UPI’s architecture is centralised, with NPCI acting as the clearing house. For countries with shaky democratic credentials, this could be a tool for monitoring citizens’ financial behaviour. For others, it might be a welcome step towards financial transparency. The user experience of society, if you will, must be designed with care.
Let us not ignore the geopolitical chessboard. China’s Alipay and WeChat Pay have been making inroads globally, but their closed systems and Chinese government control have made them less palatable to many nations. India’s UPI offers an open-source alternative, one that is seen as less threatening. This is a soft power win for India, and a direct counter to China’s Belt and Road digital initiatives. But in the long run, will this create a new bloc of digital allies, or foster fragmentation?
For the common man in these 50 nations, the immediate effects will be tangible. Remittance costs to and from India will plummet. Tourism will become seamless. Small businesses will gain access to a borderless payment network. But they must also understand the trade-offs. A UPI transaction may be free or low-cost, but the price paid in data is non-trivial.
The tech community loves to talk about ‘leapfrogging’ – skipping legacy systems to adopt newer, better technology. But leapfrogging should not mean vaulting over critical discussions about privacy and ethics. As UPI goes global, the tech and policy communities must work together to build a framework that ensures these systems serve the user, not the state or corporate interests.
To its credit, NPCI has made the UPI platform open-source, allowing any nation to examine the code and customise it. But open-source is not a panacea. It requires active community oversight, and a global coalition of technologists and activists to hold the system accountable.
In conclusion, the UPI expansion is a milestone, one that could truly democratise finance. But we must temper our optimism with vigilance. The future is real-time, but it must also be transparent. Let us hope that the 50 nations do not just adopt the technology, but also the lessons of its adoption, both good and bad.








