M-Pesa, the
world's leading mobile money service in Kenya. (EPA/Daniel Irungu)
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Edward Joseph Karemera, 39, a resident of Buikwe
district in central Uganda, has been running a fish trading business between
Rwanda and Uganda for eight years, he used to make the painstaking nine-hour
journey by bus to Nyabugogo in Kigali, Rwanda which is the destination of his
fish, from his stores on the shores of Lake Victoria in Kiyindi at least six
times in a month. His commodities go by truck, but he also had to make the
trips to receive payment for the supplies, which he would change into Uganda
shillings and go back to buy more fish.
The business was becoming untenable because of
the long trips, and despite working with the same customers for so long nothing
could change, he had to personally pick his money.
But since the introduction of a cross-border
money remittance service, his clients in Kigali now send him the money on his
MTN Uganda mobile money account while he is in Uganda, he saves on the costs
and his business has expanded.
Mobile
money adoption in Africa outpaced growth in the rest of the world, with over
half of all services globally and more than 40% of adults in active use
Karemera says mobile money has been a boon for his business and can’t imagine living without mobile phones even though they only came available to him less than two decades ago. “My trade has become much easier and cost effective, its even easier dealing with workers now, anything I want I just send them money and they purchase it.”
The mobile money service has grown to include
international inbound remittance transfers to other countries through partners
like World Remit, Small World and Western Union.
Examples like Karemera’s support the notion that
with a mobile phone, Africa has a real chance of overcoming lost years of
underdevelopment.
Mobile money accounts in sub-Saharan Africa have surpassed bank accounts, says a report from global trade body GSMA. It
gives a fighting chance for millions of un-banked rural poor to be financially
included and benefit from products like savings and loans for their small and
mostly informal businesses, money transfers, among others.
Analysts believe there is still plenty more
ground to break by mobile money’s impact in Africa. Only 17% of the viable
mobile money rural market has been tapped says GSMA, Tanzania for instance
still has up to 92% of its people especially in rural areas still unbanked.
That said, mobile money adoption in the region
outpaced growth in the rest of the world, contributing 140 mobile money
services of the 277 global totals, and more than 40% of adults in the region
use the service on an active basis, but it looks like this is just the
beginning.
Telecom industry captains are not able to rest on
their laurels, the current market dynamics are unforgiving they say. There is
more pressure for telcos to generate revenue from additional services beyond
voice and SMS even as the growing penetration of smartphones and internet
means dwindling revenue growth caused by so called over-the top platforms disruption.
More people are increasingly bypassing voice and SMS to use social medias like
WhatsApp, Facebook and others, for both voice calls and instant messaging.
“Telecom operators have no choice but to
capitalize on innovation and the scalable nature of mobile money” said Mats
Granryd, the director general of GSMA, at the recent mobile 360 event in Dar Es
Salaam.
The glossy numbers however only tell part of the
story, the real equalizer effect of mobile money has been the impact of the
innovation around financial services, where telecom players have churned out
multiple use cases cutting across all economic divides in Africa, from simple
ones like money transfer and air time top-up to more sophisticated ones like
bill payments and bank-to mobile wallet transactions.
As more people overcome the digital cultural
shock and become digitally literate they are shopping with tap & pay and
other merchant payment solutions, while they also pay their utility bills,
cable TV subscriptions and even taxes. Using mobile money significantly
increases efficiencies, for instance Dar es Salaam water and sewerage
cooperation registered a 38% increase in revenue collections when it started
collecting it through mobile money.
Granryd also noted that telecoms have to develop
more Non-communication services that ease life and solve problems, while
consolidating the existing user-cases, that it is through these new revenue
streams that the industry will stay afloat.
Mobile money has become a lifeline to unfortunate
members of society, for instance up to 52% of refugees from Nyarugusu refugee
camp in Tanzania use mobile money to receive humanitarian cash donations,
remittances from home countries as well as wage payments.
Although the innovation was born in East Africa,
West Africa has emerged as the new mobile money frontier, where adoption is
currently almost 29% of active mobile money accounts in Sub-Saharan Africa are
now based, compared to just 8% five years ago.
Markets such as Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Namibia,
Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe have more than 40% of users as active mobile
money users.
Sitoyo Lopokoiyit, the director of m-commerce at
Vodacom Tanzania said operators will have to look beyond inter-operating with
other MNO’s and innovate new services to loop it other players like banks,
while deepening the existing ones.
“When I was in China I never even saw their
money, all transactions were cashless, it was so efficient, that’s where we
should be looking but we can’t achieve this alone as MNO’s, we have to
interoperate with other industry players” said Sitoyo.
Only
17% of the viable mobile money rural market has been tapped says GSMA, Tanzania
for instance still has up to 92% of its people especially in rural areas still
unbanked.
The growing stable of mobile money savings and credit products are quickly changing the way people access soft loans, M-Shwari, the M-Pesa credit product alone has disbursed soft loans amounting to US$1.3 billion since 2012, most of this going to SMES’s. With a non-performing loan ratio of 1.92%, and prohibitive interest rates in banks, adoption will only grow for these credit products.
Mobile money has also been seen as a lifeline to
a number of social and economic clusters in Africa, from the increasing number
of agents, growing from 100,000 agents in 2011 to 1.5 million in 2016, 47% of
revenues from mobile money in the region went to agents.
The wider reach of a mobile phone has proved to be an asset especially in Africa, it’s a multifaceted tool which has been improving people’s lives across the board as the world tries to connect the next billion, to accelerate this, governments have to look far by providing the needed policy support and update the archaic regulations in place.
Originally published in QUARTZ AFRICA
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