A new consumer study has revealed that financial scams remain a major concern in Pakistan, with fifty five percent of respondents reporting that they experienced fraud during the past year. At the same time, digital shopping habits continue to evolve rapidly, as eighty two percent of consumers said they now use artificial intelligence tools to support their online purchasing decisions. The findings, published in the annual Visa Stay Secure study, highlight both the immense commercial opportunities and the underlying structural risks emerging simultaneously within the rapidly growing digital economy of Pakistan.
According to the comprehensive market survey, regional consumers are increasingly turning to AI powered tools to significantly improve their day to day digital shopping experience. The survey found that fifty six percent of Pakistani respondents actively use artificial intelligence to compare retail prices across platforms before making final purchases, while fifty three percent rely on the technology to verify product reviews and aggregate customer ratings. Additionally, forty seven percent of consumers utilize AI systems for automated gift recommendations, reflecting a broader demographic shift toward tech assisted shopping habits. As a direct result of these efficiencies, ninety three percent of respondents stated that AI tools have successfully made online shopping faster, easier, and substantially more convenient.
However, consumer trust in fully automated monetary transactions remains remarkably limited despite the growing popularity and ease of artificial intelligence. While mainstream consumers appreciate the unique ability of AI to simplify initial product searches and personalize brand recommendations, only forty two percent of those surveyed stated they would trust an autonomous AI agent to independently complete the actual checkout process on their behalf. Furthermore, fifty five percent of participants reported discovering entirely new brands and independent retailers exclusively through AI assisted browsing paths, demonstrating that the underlying technology is already heavily influencing purchasing decisions and shifting consumer behavior across the country.
Cyber fraud continues to present a significant systemic challenge to the expansion of digital commerce, particularly across various social media platforms. Among the survey participants who experienced financial scams over the past twelve months, forty four percent stated the fraud originated directly through social media channels, easily surpassing the volume of malicious incidents reported on standalone websites, online marketplaces, and conventional shopping applications. Nevertheless, Pakistani consumers remain highly optimistic about the strategic role of defensive technology, with sixty five percent believing that artificial intelligence has made modern scams much easier to identify and eighty seven percent expecting AI to play a key role in future fraud prevention efforts.
The study also highlighted growing domestic concerns regarding online safety and digital literacy for children. Around seventy seven percent of respondents noted that the children in their lives struggle to recognize digital scams, while thirty three percent reported that a child under their supervision had already fallen victim to fraud while gaming or shopping online. In addition, forty four percent of parents revealed that their children currently have direct access to mobile payment apps or digital wallets, escalating worries regarding early exposure to digital threats. When asked who should take primary responsibility for protecting consumers from shopping fraud, forty nine percent pointed to payment providers and online marketplaces, thirty six percent blamed regulators or government authorities, thirty one percent identified banks, and only thirteen percent believed consumers should bear the greatest responsibility.
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