Punjab’s rural marketplaces are undergoing a quiet yet profound transformation. For decades, cash has been the lifeblood of village commerce – the medium through which farmers sell crops, shopkeepers manage stock, and families send remittances across districts. Today, mobile wallets are emerging not just as a convenience but as a structural force reshaping economic behaviour. According to the State Bank of Pakistan’s data, digital channels accounted for 89?per cent of all retail transactions by volume in the third quarter of fiscal year 2024?25, processing 1.686?billion transactions valued at Rs?27?trillion. This represents a 16?per cent increase in volume and a 22?per cent increase in value from the previous quarter, signalling that the digital rails are no longer optional, but central to commerce.
In Punjab, the rising penetration of smartphones, cheaper mobile data and interoperable platforms like Raast have made mobile wallets accessible to even small-town merchants and rural households. For villagers, the shift is not merely technical; it is economic and psychological. Cash, while tangible and familiar, constrains financial visibility, limits access to credit and complicates savings. Digital payments, by contrast, leave a record – a digital trail that can empower smallholders to demonstrate creditworthiness, access microloans, and participate in broader financial networks.
Recent figures highlight the magnitude of this change. Mobile banking apps in Pakistan now have 22.6?million users, branchless banking wallets account for 68.5?million active accounts and e?money platforms serve 5.3?million users. While urban centres lead in transaction volume, rural districts such as Jhang, Sargodha and Bahawalpur are showing measurable uptake, driven by merchants adopting QR-code scanning systems and villagers increasingly using digital remittance channels to receive funds.
Economists refer to this as the emergence of a “data-enriched informal economy.” Though much of rural Punjab’s commerce remains technically informal, the digital footprint generated through wallets creates a form of transparency previously absent. This allows predictive insights for consumption, financial planning and even targeted government subsidies. Farmers’ transactions with local traders, recorded digitally, now form a verifiable cash flow record that can be analysed for credit eligibility – a level of financial inclusion once thought unattainable outside banks.
Though much of rural Punjab’s commerce remains technically informal, the digital footprint generated through wallets creates a form of transparency previously absent.
Remittance corridors highlight the practical benefits. Previously, transfers relied on physical trips to towns, slow post offices or hand-to-hand cash delivery. Today, platforms like Raast facilitate instant settlement, allowing funds to reach recipients in minutes, reducing risk and inefficiency. In Q3?FY25 alone, Raast processed 371?million transactions worth Rs?8.5?trillion, much of which represents household-level transfers and micro-business payments.
Yet, cash is far from obsolete. Many vendors continue to quote prices in cash because familiarity, liquidity and consumer behaviour still favour tangible money, especially where network coverage is inconsistent. This duality creates a hybrid economy, where cash and digital coexist – a stepping stone rather than an abrupt replacement. Analysts note that the trajectory, however, is clear: mobile wallets are becoming the default medium for value exchange, aligning rural Punjab with global trends toward cash-light economies seen across South Asia and beyond.
The broader impact is tangible. Digital payments enable policymakers and entrepreneurs to capture previously invisible economic activity. Insights derived from transaction metadata can inform microcredit models, supply chain planning and social protection initiatives, bridging gaps between rural economic reality and formal financial systems. It also reduces the risk of liquidity constraints, allowing small businesses to plan inventory, manage credit and respond to market demand more efficiently.
For individual households, the transformation is personal and humane. A farmer can receive remittances instantly on his phone rather than waiting days for cash delivery. A shopkeeper can settle supplier invoices digitally without travelling to distant banks. Families can pay utility bills, school fees and medical expenses directly from their mobile accounts. In effect, mobile wallets are giving rural populations both convenience and agency, embedding them more firmly into the formal economy without erasing the social texture of their marketplaces.
Punjab’s rural adoption of mobile wallets exemplifies how digital finance can coexist with traditional structures while amplifying economic resilience. While challenges such as connectivity gaps and digital literacy remain, the measurable growth in adoption, volume and value demonstrates that rural financial inclusion is no longer theoretical; it is unfolding in real time. For policymakers, entrepreneurs and villagers alike, the move toward a cash-light, data-informed economy represents an unprecedented opportunity: to make everyday financial transactions more transparent, efficient and empowering.
The writer is a Lahore-based public policy analyst and can be reached at [email protected])
