Indonesian Consumers Move To Chip-Enabled Credit Cards

Consumers in Indonesia will have to use chip-enabled credit cards starting on Jan. 1, a spokesperson for Bank Indonesia, the country’s central bank, tells PaymentsSource. “The domestic system will only process payments made by chip-enabled credit cards,” the spokesperson says. “However, tourists and foreigners will still be able to use magnetic stripe cards, provided they are issued overseas.” The directive does not apply to debit cards, though some Indonesian banks issue chip-enabled debit cards. The move to chip credit cards originally was supposed to occur in 2008, the spokesperson adds, noting officials pushed back the deadline because not enough banks and merchants were ready for the switch.

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