The Citizen (KZN)

Cameroonia­ns save with tontines like SA saves with stokvels

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– Joseph Ngono’s face lights up with a smile as he looks at his smartphone, where a payment worth $830 (about R15 440) has just appeared in his digital wallet.

Like many Cameroonia­ns, the computer scientist pays in each week to a shared savings fund known as a tontine – similar to SA’s stokvels – an ancient system that start-ups are now bringing into the digital age.

This week it paid out 500 000 Central African francs to Ngono, who will use it to cover the final instalment of his children’s school fees. “Without it, they wouldn’t go to school,” he said.

Shunned by banks, many people in Cameroon turn to their communitie­s for help in the form of tontines, such as the one Ngono uses via the smartphone app Djangui.

In its most common form, members pay money into a common fund and take turns collecting it after an agreed period, interest free.

Every week, Ngono, colleagues and strangers they sponsor, contribute 10 000 Central African francs each on Djangui.

It gives crucial access to ready cash for Ngono – he only occasional­ly receives his monthly salary because his employer is “experienci­ng some cash flow difficulti­es”.

The system of “pooling savings ... between people united by connection­s of family, friendship, profession, clan” existed “long before the introducti­on of money”, said a 2020 report published by the Global Developmen­t Research Centre. It lists at least 30 African countries where tontines are used and 14 in Asia.

Launched in 2016 by Guilain Kenfack, Djangui was one of the first tontine apps in Cameroon.

“The idea came to me because I was in a traditiona­l tontine and it was becoming very difficult. We weren’t sure if some people had paid or not,” he said.

Since its creation, Kenfack said the app has gained 50 000 users.

A number of imitators have sprung up and now there are several apps offering tontines online in Cameroon.

As in other countries in Africa, many Cameroonia­ns struggle to get loans from mainstream banks.

In Cameroon, the average interest rate for loans to individual­s was 10% in 2022, according to the Bank of Central African States.

It can exceed 20% elsewhere in Africa.

Banks also rarely give credit to those on small- and medium-sized incomes.

The tontine “replaces the bank” and allows “informal economic players” to make essential expenditur­es or investment­s, said Omer Zang, the founder of Social Brokers, a Cameroonia­n nongovernm­ental organisati­on that supports tontines.

However, even online tontines can be risky as people can register under false identities.

“I lost over one million Central African francs that I had saved for a year” in an online tontine, said Paul Kemayou, a 48-year-old civil servant. “When it came to receiving the money, the administra­tor was unable to tell me where the money had gone.”

This is why some keep to the traditiona­l tontines.

“I prefer tontines where people meet in person,” said Emmanuel Talla, a shopkeeper in Yaounde. “The relationsh­ips are about more than just money.” –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Cycle rickshaw drivers wait for customers in Hanoi yesterday.
Picture: AFP Cycle rickshaw drivers wait for customers in Hanoi yesterday.

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