A landmark digital payments initiative aimed at empowering micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) and informal vendors has officially launched at the busy Manor Park/Constant Spring bus park in Jamaica, drawing praise from government officials as a transformative step toward modernizing local commerce.
Delano Seiveright, Member of Parliament for St Andrew North Central and State Minister in the Ministry of Industry, Investment and Commerce, called the roll-out a game-changing development for the area’s small business ecosystem, framing it as a core component of broader efforts to upgrade the region’s transport and commercial infrastructure.
Led by global payment technology leader Mastercard in collaboration with a coalition of public and private sector partners, the initiative is designed to close the digital inclusion gap for small and informal traders. By simplifying access to electronic payment processing, the project aims to bring unbanked and underbanked vendors into the formal digital economy, opening new growth opportunities that were previously out of reach.
This expansion follows a successful pilot program that launched in craft markets across Montego Bay, St James. Building on that early momentum, the program is now being rolled out to additional public market spaces and tourism-linked commercial zones across the entire island of Jamaica.
During an on-site visit to the bus park Tuesday, Seiveright emphasized that the digital push aligns perfectly with ongoing plans to revitalize the entire Manor Park commercial district, designed to improve experiences for both local vendors and the thousands of customers that pass through the hub daily.
“This is exactly the direction we need to go,” Seiveright explained during the event. “We are supporting our small operators with practical tools to grow their businesses, improve operational efficiency, and access a wider customer base — including international visitors who increasingly rely on cards and digital payment methods.”
Strategically positioned as a key transit gateway connecting Kingston to Jamaica’s northern and north-western regions, the Manor Park bus park sees consistent foot traffic from both local commuters and out-of-town tourists. Seiveright noted that a growing share of these visitors now prefer cashless transactions, making digital payment access a critical competitive advantage for local vendors.
To enable immediate adoption, Jamaica’s National Commercial Bank (NCB) has provided pre-activated mobile point-of-sale devices to a first cohort of participating vendors, allowing them to begin accepting digital payments right after onboarding. Leading regional telecommunications provider Digicel is supporting the project with network connectivity and on-site technical assistance to ensure seamless activation and ongoing trouble-free use for participating traders.
Seiveright personally took part in a demonstration transaction with a local vendor during the launch, showcasing the system’s intuitive design and fast processing speed to attendees.
The digital enablement program runs in tandem with major physical infrastructure upgrades to the Manor Park bus park and adjacent vending area, which are being delivered through a structured public-private partnership framework. Seiveright confirmed that a large share of the physical renovation work has already been completed, with additional construction and improvement projects currently in progress.
Major landscape enhancement works, scheduled to be carried out by Pan Jamaica Group Limited — one of Jamaica’s largest corporate entities and a major property owner in the Manor Park district — are set to kick off before the end of this month.
The broader Manor Park redevelopment initiative is spearheaded by Seiveright, private sector leader Richard Lake and the Lake Group, with core support from the Lisa Hanna Foundation. Additional strategic backing has been committed by PanJam, the Tourism Product Development Company (TPDCo), the Kingston and St Andrew Municipal Corporation (KSAMC), and leading corporate partner Wisynco Group Limited.
Seiveright stressed that combining large-scale physical infrastructure upgrades with digital capability building creates a holistic, people-centered model for community and commercial development, rather than the piecemeal approaches common to many public space renewal projects.
“We’re not just fixing the space physically. We’re also equipping the people who operate within it to compete in a more modern economy,” Seiveright said, urging participating vendors to embrace the new platform and establish themselves as early innovators in digital commerce across Kingston’s growing commercial sector.
“This is an opportunity to fundamentally improve how business is done here — making operations more efficient, more secure, and more attractive to a far wider range of customers,” he added.
