The central bank announced the formation of the Myanmar Payment Union (MPU), in cooperation with 17 banks, which will let customers take out cash from any ATM machine nationwide and make payments in a small number of shops, restaurants and offices.
"Now we still have a cash society, but we're heading towards a cashless one," Ye Min Oo, secretary of the MPU, said at the launch in the commercial capital, Yangon.
Debit and credit cards have been available for years in most neighboring countries but the arrival of plastic in Myanmar is a significant step for an economy lumbered with an antiquated banking system after decades of Western sanctions and disastrous fiscal policies under a military regime.
Even ATM machines were virtually unheard of in Myanmar a year ago, when cash had to be used for almost every transaction.
The military regime gave way in March 2011 to a quasi-civilian government under President Thein Sein, who has introduced a series of political and economic reforms.
These have included the introduction of a managed float of the kyat currency in April this year, when a system of multiple exchange rates began to be dismantled.
ATM cards were launched this year, but holders were only able to use the machines of their own bank.
Plans are in place to offer credit cards in coming months after MasterCard Inc reached an agreement with Co-Operative Bank Limited, which has 24 ATMs, to issue the country's first branded cards.
Foreign banks are still not allowed to offer banking services in Myanmar. A growing number have opened representative offices.
Use of the new debit cards will be restricted at first to 14 places in Yangon, including shopping malls, airline offices, computer shops, one hotel and two restaurants.
Withdrawals from ATM machines will be limited to 1 million kyat ($1,152) per day, the central bank said.
(Reporting by Thu Rein Hlaing; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Alan Raybould and Robert Birsel)
source: nytimes.com