When 32-year-old editor Samantha Tan signed up for a BNPL (buy now, pay later) platform last year, it was mostly to redeem discounts. Her first few transactions were seamless, but it was only when she tried returning an online purchase that things got complicated: The staff told her to complete the instalments in full so they could give her a cash refund at the store.
But because it was an online purchase, she had to schedule a pickup, which never happened. She’s now stuck with the items, and does not have a solution at hand. She adds: “The annoying thing was that I did have the money to spend. It was just an impulse buy at the end of the month and I wanted to feel less guilty about spending.”
You might have seen the eye-catching signs of Atome, Hoolah and Pace at the check-out counters of both offline and e-commerce retailers. This is how they work: You rack up a bill of, say, $200, and you have the option to pay the full sum instantly using conventional methods (cash, debit or credit card), or use a BNPL platform to split the interest-free payment over a couple of months.
Many retailers also offer rewards and discounts only for BNPL users. You also have the option of clearing your debts ahead of time, without incurring a fee.
In Singapore, a 2021 research report by consumer research and analytics company Milieu Insight noted that around 19 per cent of the adult population have used a BNPL platform, out of which, 73 per cent attested that they would continue doing so. In 2021, BNPL transactions amounted to US$317 million ($441 million) in Singapore (which accounts for less than 0.5 per cent of total credit and debit transactions), and are predicted to increase to an estimated US$3 billion ($4 billion) by 2028, according to a PayNXT360 report.
This story is from the August 2022 edition of Her World Singapore.
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This story is from the August 2022 edition of Her World Singapore.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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It’s 10 am on a Monday, and Gan Guoyi, 40, walks into Jigger & Pony with a set of dry-cleaned clothes – a picture of calm amid the aftermath of last night’s chaos. The Singapore bar recently secured a spot in the Top 5 of The World’s 50 Best Bars 2024 list, announced in Madrid on Oct 23. To celebrate, she threw a three-night promotion from Nov 10, where customers enjoyed five premium cocktails for just $5 each at select bars like Gibson, Live Twice, Sugarhall, Como Pony Jakarta, and Jigger & Pony.Naturally, the event was a hit, and Guoyi, who was manning the guest list at Sugarhall, only managed a few hours of sleep the night before. Still, she arrives promptly to our photo shoot without complaints.
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