Abstract

The demand for mobile payments using smartphones to substitute the need for cash, credit cards, or checks is swiftly increasing in Pakistan. This study investigates the factors determining consumers’ behavioral intention to adopt near-field communication mobile payment from a developing country’s viewpoint. A conceptual framework was adopted based on the mobile technology acceptance model (MTAM), integrating self-efficacy theory, critical mass theory, flow theory, and system and service quality to elucidate the behavioral intention. Data were collected through a self-administered questionnaire applied to 310 nonusers of near-field communication mobile payment in Pakistan. The analysis was performed using SmartPLS3.0. The results demonstrated that other independent variables are the main predictors of the intention to adopt mobile payment besides technology self-efficacy, perceived critical mass, and mobile ease of use. The study concludes with key implications and future work directions concerning the limitation of this study.

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