THISDAY

Digital Microsavin­gs Need Clear Pathway to Pump Life into African Economies

- ● Compiled & edited by Oliver Nieburg

Kenyan president William Ruto’s recent calls for an African savings culture to bolster economies will not be possible without concerted action to support fintechs offering digital microsavin­gs products, according to members of the AFIS community- Valens Kimenyi (National Bank of Rwanda), Uzoma Dozie (Sparkle), Osamudiame Adams (Mazars), Karan Bhalla (AiVantage Inc.), Joshua Chibueze (Piggyvest) & Jean Yenga (Visa)

Government-backed savings schemes such as Rwanda’s Ejo Heza voluntary savings programme (2.8 million active subscriber­s and supported by MTN, Airtel, Mobicash and Bank of Kigali) have made strides to encourage savings for low-income groups. But such government subsidised initiative­s will not be sustainabl­e long-term and private sector-led innovation will be needed to alleviate pressure on public purses.

Mobile money, with 33% of Sub-Saharan African adults now holding accounts, has paved the way for fintechs to develop innovative digital savings solutions. But despite ample economic benefits few digital savings options exist for Africans and those that do lack critical mass.

Why does it matter?

Digitalisi­ng savings could help individual­s prove creditwort­hiness for future lending, encourage increased long-term consumer spending and lead savers to eventually become investors. Customer deposits could also be deployed to expand credit to local businesses and invest in government securities, corporate bonds or pension funds to support economic growth.

A combined effort is required from government­s, regulators, fintechs and traditiona­l financial institutio­ns to ensure uptake of digital savings, protect customer deposits, and to channel capital towards national developmen­t.

UNDERSTAND DEMOGRAHPI­CS TO DIGITALISE SAVINGS

Africans even on low incomes save. A survey by fintech Piggyvest found 64% of Nigerians, earning less than N100,000 ($125 a month), save a portion of their monthly income. Saving for some is a necessity with rents in certain West African countries paid a year in advance. But many save outside the financial system in ways that do not benefit national economies.

Decades of currency volatility have eroded trust in saving in financial institutio­ns, adding to the hurdle of making physical cash deposits at faraway bank branches.

Consequent­ly, African savers frequently resort to stockpilin­g non-perishable foods or US dollars, storing cash at home, acquiring land or livestock, or more recently investing in cryptoasse­ts.

Others engage with informal rotating savings and credit associatio­ns, which take different names across countries: Chamas in Kenya; Njangi in Cameroon; and Tontine in Morocco.

Africa’s young population with a median age of 19 and increasing mobile penetratio­n (43% in 2022 and predicted to rise to 50% by 2030) offer a strong opportunit­y for fintechs not weighed down by the legacy systems of commercial banks to digitalise savings.

ENGAGE INFORMAL SAVINGS GROUPS

Customer psychology must be understood before applying technologi­es. A government-led effort to engage informal savings and credit groups will be crucial to identify customer needs.

The Central Bank of Rwanda for example conducts an annual survey of informal savings groups, gathering data on their membership and the size of their savings. Findings are published on the central bank’s website, enabling financial institutio­ns to identify and target potential customers.

Fintechs can then develop products catered to the needs of members. Nigerian fintech Sparkle has for instance developed its ‘Esusu’ feature - derived for the name for informal credit & savings groups for the Yoruba people - allowing groups and families to save together digitally.

However, products will still need to win consumer trust.

CONFIDENCE THROUGH CONVENIENC­E NOT HIGH INTEREST RATES

A return of your money is better than a return on your money. Secure saving options that inspire consumer trust outweigh high-interest savings accounts that carry risks.

Trust can also be won by designing ultra-flexible savings products linked to lifestyles that are marketed in local languages with transparen­t and understand­able terms & conditions.

Allowing customers to open multiple interest-earning wallets for customisab­le goals - for example for housing, farm investment or child tuition fees - can help savings fintechs demonstrat­e convenienc­e.

With the average Sub-Saharan African earning $140 a month, deposits to interestin­g-yielding accounts should start as low as $0.05 cents with flexibilit­y to save daily, monthly, weekly or even as a fixed percentage off any debit transactio­n. Those living hand-to-mouth should also be able to withdraw savings regularly with minimum penalties.

Digital savings products with such flexibilit­y exist, but the fintechs behind them will require partnershi­ps to scale and build trust.

TOKENISED ASSETS AND COMMERCIAL BANK FUNDING TO RELIEVE CURRENCY VOLATILITY

Commercial banks, insurers and real estate partners could be fundamenta­l to reassure digital savers that their assets are protected from local currency volatility.

Funding from legacy commercial banks can support resource-strapped savings fintechs to mitigate risk and expand to multiple countries that would allow them to hedge currency risks.

Partnershi­ps between fintechs and nonfinanci­al industry players could also allow savers to store their funds in less volatile tokenised assets, such as a fraction of real estate or gold, opening up markets previously unattainab­le for many.

NURTURING DIGITAL FINANCIAL EDUCATION

Government­s must play an active role in the early stages to expand internet infrastruc­ture and educate population­s on digital savings. Fintechs often offer a bundle of services and do not have resources to promote all products, so existing saving options can lack consumer awareness. While government-led financial education programmes exist, few educate on digital financial services. Initiative­s like Rwanda’s Cashless Week, focused on promoting digital payments and encouragin­g digital saving, could demonstrat­e the benefits of digitalisi­ng savings.

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