Signposts: "Why does Kenya lead the world in mobile money?"
From The Economist:
PAYING for a taxi ride using your mobile phone is easier in
Nairobi than it is in New York, thanks to Kenya’s world-leading
mobile-money system, M-PESA. Launched in 2007 by Safaricom,
the country’s largest mobile-network operator, it is now used by over
17m Kenyans, equivalent to more than two-thirds of the adult population;
around 25% of the country’s gross national product flows through it.
M-PESA lets people transfer cash using their phones, and is by far the
most successful scheme of its type on earth. Why does Kenya lead the
world in mobile money?
M-PESA was originally designed as a system
to allow microfinance-loan repayments to be made by phone, reducing the
costs associated with handling cash and thus making possible lower
interest rates. But after pilot testing it was broadened to become a
general money-transfer scheme. Once you have signed up, you pay money
into the system by handing cash to one of Safaricom’s 40,000 agents
(typically in a corner shop selling airtime), who credits the money to
your M-PESA account. You withdraw money by visiting another agent, who
checks that you have sufficient funds before debiting your account and
handing over the cash. You can also transfer money to others using a
menu on your phone. Cash can thus be sent one place to another more
quickly, safely and easily than taking bundles of in person, or asking
others to carry it for you. This is particularly useful in a country
where many workers in cities send money back home to their families in
rural villages. Electronic transfers save people time, freeing them to
do other, more productive things instead....MORE
See also
Izabella Kaminska at FT Alphaville (68 hits).