Prelims
The Sustainability of Financial Innovation in E-Payment Systems
ISBN: 978-1-80455-885-0, eISBN: 978-1-80455-884-3
Publication date: 25 July 2023
Citation
Jain, D., Dash, M.K. and Thakur, K.S. (2023), "Prelims", The Sustainability of Financial Innovation in E-Payment Systems, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xix. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-884-320231008
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2023 Deepa Jain, Manoj Kumar Dash and K. S. Thakur. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
The Sustainability of Financial Innovation in E-Payment Systems
Title Page
The Sustainability of Financial Innovation in E-Payment Systems
Deepa Jain
GGSIP University, India
Manoj Kumar Dash
ABV-IIITM, India
And
K. S. Thakur
Jiwaji University, India
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2023
Copyright © 2023 Deepa Jain, Manoj Kumar Dash and K. S. Thakur.
Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited.
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-80455-885-0 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-80455-884-3 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-80455-886-7 (Epub)
List of Figures
Chapter 1 | |
Figure 1. | Underlying Area of Proposed Research. |
Figure 2. | Pillars of Sustainability. |
Figure 3. | Research Process. |
Figure 4. | Research Design of Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) Through the Flow Diagram. |
Figure 5. | Research Design of Literature Review Process Through Flow Diagram. |
Chapter 2 | |
Figure 1. | Co-Authorship Map. |
Figure 2. | Countries Map. |
Figure 3. | Keywords Map. |
Figure 4. | Source Map. |
Figure 5. | Growth of 108 Articles (India). |
Figure 6. | Growth of 701 Articles (Abroad). |
Figure 7. | Keywords Citation Map Using Cluster Analysis. |
Figure 8. | Conceptual Model for Financial Market. |
Chapter 4 | |
Figure 1. | Beyond Shopping E-Payment is Generally Used For. |
Figure 2. | Preference for Payment Mode. |
Figure 3. | Reasons for Use of E-Payment. |
Figure 4. | Preference for E-Payment Over Other Modes of Payment. |
Figure 5. | Barriers in Acceptance of E-Payment. |
Figure 6. | Communication Benefits Offered by E-Payment. |
Figure 7. | Most Innovative Features of Financial Technology of E-Payment. |
Figure 8. | Innovative Features of Financial Service of E-Payment. |
Figure 9. | Features that Make E-Payment as Financial Innovation. |
Figure 10. | Quality of E-Payment. |
Figure 11. | Reasons Which Resist Use of E-Payment. |
Chapter 5 | |
Figure 1. | Flow Diagram of Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA) and Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA). |
Figure 2. | Validation of Factor 1 (PIE) Through CFA. |
Figure 3. | Validation of Factor 2 (AUTT) Through CFA. |
Figure 4. | Validation of Factor 3 (FSI) Through CFA. |
Figure 5. | Validation of Factor 4 (TC) Through CFA. |
Figure 6. | Validation of Factor 5 (TCP) Through CFA. |
Figure 7. | Validation of Factor 6 PIS Through CFA. |
Figure 8. | Validation of Identified Factors Through CFA. |
Figure 9. | Research Model for Determinants of E-Payment System (Designed by the Researchers on the Basis of Extracted Factors). |
Chapter 6 | |
Figure 1. | Hypothetical Structural Model for SEPS. |
Figure 2. | Steps in Developing and Analyzing SEM. |
Figure 3. | Flow Diagram of Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) Analysis. |
Figure 4. | Structural Model of SEPS. |
Figure 5. | Result of Hypothesis Testing. |
Figure 6. | Sustainable E-payment System Based on Target Segments. |
Chapter 7 | |
Figure 1. | Research Model for E-Payment System (Designed by the Researchers Based on Extracted Factors). |
List of Tables
Chapter 1 | |
Table 1. | Overview of Sustainable Development Goals. |
Table 2. | Summary of Research Objectives, Gaps, and Contribution. |
Chapter 2 | |
Table 1. | Outline of Bibliometric Analysis (BA). |
Table 2. | Top Countries Based on Citation. |
Table 3. | Top Keywords Based on Citation. |
Table 4. | Top Sources Based on Citation. |
Table 5. | Summary of Studies on E-payment System in Indian Scenario. |
Table 6. | Summary of Studies on E-payment System in International Scenario. |
Table 7. | Citation of Factors/Variables (In the Context of E-payment System). |
Table 8. | Identified Clusters With Dominant Keywords. |
Chapter 3 | |
Table 1. | Outline-Research Methodology. |
Table 2. | Framework Empirical Analysis. |
Chapter 4 | |
Table 1. | Outline of Chapter 4. |
Table 2. | Demographic Profile of the Respondents. |
Table 3. | Feedback of Respondents on E-Payment. |
Table 4. | Barriers Faced While Using E-Payment. |
Table 5. | Usage of E-Payment Based on Gender. |
Table 6. | Usage of E-Payment Based on Age. |
Table 7. | Usage of E-Payment Based on Education. |
Table 8. | Usage of E-Payment Based on Income. |
Table 9. | Perception of Users Towards E-Payment System. |
Table 10. | Continuum of the Direction of Responses. |
Chapter 5 | |
Table 1. | Outline of Chapter 5. |
Table 2. | Types of Validity. |
Table 3. | Cronbach's Reliability Statistics of All Statements. |
Table 4. | KMO and Bartlett's Test (Sample Adequacy Test). |
Table 5. | Total Variance Explained. |
Table 6. | Rotated Component Matrix of All Statements. |
Table 7. | Factor 1 – ‘Payment Infrastructure Ecosystem’ (PIE). |
Table 8. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Factor 1 (PIE) Through CFA. |
Table 9. | Factor 2 – ‘Autonomy to Use Technology’ (AUTT). |
Table 10. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Factor 2 (AUTT) Through CFA. |
Table 11. | Factor 3 – ‘Financial Sustainable Innovation’ (FSI). |
Table 12. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Factor 3 (FSI) Through CFA. |
Table 13. | Factor 4 – ‘Technology Characteristics’ (TC). |
Table 14. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Factor 4 (TC) Through CFA. |
Table 15. | Factor 5 – ‘Technology Communication Platform’ (TCP). |
Table 16. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Factor 5 TCP Through CFA. |
Table 17. | Factor 6 – ‘Payment Information Security’ (PIS). |
Table 18. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Factor 6 (PIS) Through CFA. |
Table 19. | Regression Coefficient Calculated Through Validation of Identified Factors Through CFA. |
Table 20. | Result of Measurement Model (E-Payment System). |
Table 21. | Discriminant Validity of E-Payment System Scale (AVE & Squared Interconstruct Correlations – SIC Comparison). |
Table 22. | Scale Description for Validated Constructs (C i = Factors/Criteria, C ij = Sub-Factor/Sub-Criteria). |
Chapter 6 | |
Table 1. | Citation Reporting of Adoption Intention. |
Table 2. | Citation Reporting of Trust. |
Table 3. | Citation Reporting of Sustainability. |
Table 4. | Citation Reporting of SEM Application Globally. |
Table 5. | Path Estimates for SEPS Model. |
Table 6. | Goodness-of-Fit of Structural Model of SEPS. |
Table 7. | Moderating Effect of Gender. |
Table 8. | Moderating Effect of Age. |
Table 9. | Moderating Effect of Education Level. |
Table 10. | Moderating Effect of Family Type. |
Table 11. | Moderating Effect of Marital Status. |
Table 12. | Moderating Effect of Family Income. |
Table 13. | Segmentation Approach to Sustainability of E-Payment System on Customer Perspective (SEPSCP). |
Chapter 7 | |
Table 1. | Summary of Contributions of the Study. |
Table 2. | Summary of Proposed Strategies. |
List of Abbreviations
AGFI | Adjusted Goodness of Fit Index |
AHP | Analytical Hierarchy Process |
AI | Adoption Intention |
AMOS | Analysis of a Moment Structures |
ANOVA | Analysis of Variance |
ATT | Attitude |
AUTT | Autonomy to Use Technology |
AVE | Average Variance Extracted |
BHIM | Bharat Interface for Money |
BI | Behavioural Intention |
BA | Bibliometric Analysis |
CFA | Confirmatory Factor Analysis |
CFI | Comparative Fit Index |
CMIN | Chi-Square Value |
CMIN/df | Chi-Square Value Normalized by Degrees of Freedom |
COD | Cash on Delivery |
COMP | Compatibility |
CR | Composite Reliability |
df | Degree of Freedom |
Dipam | Department of Investment and Public Asset Management |
DPs | Digital Payments |
DPS | Digital Payment System |
DPSs | Digital Payment Systems |
DWs | Digital Wallets |
EC | Expected Cross-Validation Index |
ECS | Electronic Clearing Service |
EFA | Exploratory Factor Analysis |
EOU | Ease of Use |
EP | E-Payment/Electronic Payment |
EPCFA | Exploratory Principal Component Factor Analysis |
EPs | E-Payments/Electronic Payments |
EPS | E-Payment System/Electronic Payment System |
EPSs | E-Payment Systems/Electronic Payment Systems |
e-WOM | Electronic Word-of-Mouth |
FC | Facilitating Conditions |
FSI | Financial System Innovation |
GFI | Goodness of Fit Index |
GOF | Goodness-of-Fit |
G2P | Government-to-Person |
IFI | Incremental Fit Index |
IMPS | Immediate Payment Service |
ITA | Intention to Adopt |
ITU | Intention to Use |
JoMoPay | Jordan MP/Jorden Mobile Payment |
KMO | Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin |
KMO-MSA | Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin Measure of Sampling Adequacy |
LR | Literature Review |
Meity | Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology |
MP | Mobile Payment |
MPOS | Mobile Point-of-Sale |
MPS | Mobile Payment System |
MPs | Mobile Payments |
MSA | Measure of Sampling Adequacy |
MSV | Maximum Shared Variance |
NEFT | National Electronic Fund Transfer |
NCR | National Capital Region |
NFI | Normed Fit Index |
NT | New Technology |
PCA | Principal Component Analysis |
PCLOSE | Process Close |
PE | Performance Expectancy |
PEOU | Perceived Ease of Use |
PGFI | Parsimony Goodness of Fit Index |
PIE | Payment Infrastructure Ecosystem |
PIS | Payment Information Security |
PLS | Partial Least Square |
PNFI | Parsimony Normed Fit Index |
PR | Perceived Risk |
PS | Perceived Security |
PU | Perceived Usefulness |
QR | Quick Response |
RA | Relative Advantage |
RFI | Relative Fit Index |
RMR | Root Mean Square Residual |
RMSEA | Root Mean Square Error of Approximation |
RNI | Relative Non-Centrality Index |
SDGs | Sustainable Development Goals |
SE | Structural Equation |
SEM | Structural Equation Modelling |
SEPS | Sustainability of The E-payment System |
SEPSCP | Sustainability of The E-payment System from a Customer Perspective |
SI | Social Influence |
SLR | Systematic Literature Review |
SM | Structural Model |
SMEs | Small and Medium Enterprises |
SPSS | Statistical Package of Social Science |
SRMR | Standardized Root Mean Square Residual |
SRW | Standardized Regression Weights |
SUS | Sustainability |
TACT | Technology Affordances and Constraints Theory |
TAM | Technology Acceptance Model |
TC | Technology Characteristics |
TCP | Technology Communication Platform |
TRIAL | Trialability |
TRT | Trust |
UAE | United Arab of Emirates |
UB | Usage Behaviour |
UNs | United Nations |
UTAUT | Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology |
VE | Variance Extracted |
VIF | Variance Inflation Factor |
About the Authors
Deepa Jain is Faculty in the Department of Management at Ideal Institute of Management & Technology, affiliated of GGSIP University, Delhi (India). She earned her PhD in Commerce from the Jiwaji University, Gwalior, (M.P.), India. She has published many research papers in various journals of international repute. She has worked on various research projects. She has more than 12 years of experience in teaching and training. Her research areas relate to innovation, technology and sustainability.
Manoj Kumar Dash is Faculty in the Department of Management Studies at ABV – Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management Gwalior, (M.P.) India. He earned his MA, MPhil, PhD and MBA in Marketing from the Berhampur University, Berhampur, Orissa. He has published more than 72 research papers in various journals of international and national repute. He is the author of seven books and has edited eight books. He was involved as the Chair Member in the conducted International Conference of Arts and Science held at Harvard University, Boston, USA.
K. S. Thakur is Faculty in School of Commerce and Business Studies, Jiwaji University, Gwalior, (M.P.), India. He was Head, School of Commerce and Business Studies (2014–2017), Dean, Faculty of Commerce (2013–2015 and 2019–2021), Head, School of Studies in Commerce and Management (2005–2008), Member, Executive Council, Chairman, Board of Studies. He was also involved as Coordinator in MBA-BE Programme, MBA-HA Programme and BBA Programme.
Acknowledgement
A book in the reader's hand is the result of many hardships and challenges. We would like to extend our gratitude to all the people who contributed in the completion of this book. Our sincere thanks to the Faculty and library staff of Jiwaji University, Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, India and Atal Bihari Vajpayee–Indian Institute of Information Technology & Management, Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, India, for their guidance and support.
We are indebted to Emerald team that helped us from inception to completion of this book, with special thanks to Nick Wallwork, Madison Klopfer, Thomas Creighton and Sheena Reghunath. We would like to thank our family, colleagues, friends and especially the respondents for the patience and support to complete this work.
- Prelims
- Chapter 1 Financial Market and Overview
- Chapter 2 Financial Market Research Insights – Past, Present and Future
- Chapter 3 Framework and Design in Financial Market Research
- Chapter 4 Customer Perception Towards Financial Innovation
- Chapter 5 Identification and Validation of Sustainability Factors in Financial Innovation
- Chapter 6 Sustainability of Financial Innovation
- Chapter 7 Strategy Development and Innovation in Financial Market
- References
- Index