Government facilities for electronic payment operations
The first 02/01/2024
Baghdad: Hoda Al-Azzawi,
the Prime Minister’s Financial and Economic Advisor, Dr. Mazhar Muhammad Saleh, saw that the decision recently issued by the Council of Ministers regarding electronic payment facilities and exempting the “payer-citizen” from commissions for these operations, amounts to creating a stimulating, sound and simplified environment for citizens to effectively use means of payment. Electronic payment. Dr. Mazhar Muhammad Saleh told “Al-Sabah”:
“The Council of Ministers’ decision regularized the contractual relations
between the government and the citizen if it is an electronic collection, and
between the citizen and the merchant if it is via an electronic payment card that takes place within market transactions.” He stated that
“according to the decision, the citizen does not bear any costs as a result of using electronic payment, while
there is encouragement for the merchant that the state compensates a basic aspect of the costs of electronic payment in the form of high cash allowances that are used for tax settlements or to pay the various costs incurred, provided that the settlements are made through Exclusively electronic payments. He pointed out,
"In all cases, the Cabinet's decision regarding regulating fees for electronic payment services constitutes a stimulating environment that pushes towards the effective use of electronic payment cards, whether credit, debit, or prepaid, in a simple and convenient way."
https://alsabaah.iq/91481-.html
The first 02/01/2024
Baghdad: Hoda Al-Azzawi,
the Prime Minister’s Financial and Economic Advisor, Dr. Mazhar Muhammad Saleh, saw that the decision recently issued by the Council of Ministers regarding electronic payment facilities and exempting the “payer-citizen” from commissions for these operations, amounts to creating a stimulating, sound and simplified environment for citizens to effectively use means of payment. Electronic payment. Dr. Mazhar Muhammad Saleh told “Al-Sabah”:
“The Council of Ministers’ decision regularized the contractual relations
between the government and the citizen if it is an electronic collection, and
between the citizen and the merchant if it is via an electronic payment card that takes place within market transactions.” He stated that
“according to the decision, the citizen does not bear any costs as a result of using electronic payment, while
there is encouragement for the merchant that the state compensates a basic aspect of the costs of electronic payment in the form of high cash allowances that are used for tax settlements or to pay the various costs incurred, provided that the settlements are made through Exclusively electronic payments. He pointed out,
"In all cases, the Cabinet's decision regarding regulating fees for electronic payment services constitutes a stimulating environment that pushes towards the effective use of electronic payment cards, whether credit, debit, or prepaid, in a simple and convenient way."
https://alsabaah.iq/91481-.html