Kuwait Times

Mobile money on the rise in Africa as millions get phones

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Ivan Kiryowa repeatedly checked the balance on his phone, nervous sweat on his cheeks, as he waited for money from a friend. Thirty minutes later, $150 had landed in his account and he sauntered into a hardware store, where he bought bags of cement. “Mobile money is convenient for many of us who rely on our phones to pay bills and make transactio­ns without having to go to the bank all the time,” Kiryowa said. “Without it, I think we would have a lot more problems.” Mobile money has become a way of life for millions of Africans who use their phones to pay utility bills, settle loans and even bail out friends in distress. There were 84 million active mobile money accounts in Africa as of December, according to the London-based industry group GSMA. It says there were mobile money operations in 31 African countries.

In the East African capitals of Kampala and Nairobi, where the phenomenon is particular­ly strong, booths offering mobile money services dot the streets. Now, even taxes can be paid via mobile phone in Uganda, in a revolution that threatens commercial banks as more and more people can afford handheld devices. “When people come here to make mobile transactio­ns, in effect this is their bank,” said Charles Onyait, a mobile money agent in Kampala, the Ugandan capital. “The most important thing, of course, is the convenienc­e of mobile money.” Only about 34 percent of adults in Africa have a traditiona­l bank account, according to World Bank data. Analysts say mobile money is widening financial inclusion by tapping into unbanked Africans, especially in rural areas where banking facilities are few and illiteracy tends to be high.

The value of mobile money transactio­ns in sub-Saharan Africa reached $655 million in 2014 and could surpass $1.3 billion by 2019, according to data by the consulting firm Frost & Sullivan. This year, mobile money services have become internatio­nal. In January, the Londonbase­d remittance service company WorldRemit and the South African telecom giant MTN Group announced a global partnershi­p agreement that allows WorldRemit customers to send money instantly to MTN mobile money wallets in Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia, adding to the growing list of destinatio­ns where such transfers can be possible. —AP

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