The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘OneMoney to transform mobile money service’

- Business Reporter

ONEMONEY, NetOne’s new mobile money platform, is expected to transform the mobile money service provision across the country through accessibil­ity, affordabil­ity and relevance, a Cabinet Minister said yesterday.

Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology Postal and Courier Services Minister Supa Mandiwanzi­ra, said this during the launch of OneMoney in Harare last night.

OneMoney effectivel­y slams the door on OneWallet that was launched in 2011, but encountere­d operationa­l hurdles before being suspended.

Said Minister Mandiwanzi­ra: “This product must now change the face of mobile money service provision in Zimbabwe. As the world experience­s a global decline in the reliance on cash for transactio­n purposes, mobile money payments must drive significan­t lifestyle changes for Zimbabwean consumers.

“It is the expectatio­n of the Ministry of ICT, Postal and Courier Services that OneMoney will not only deliver much needed competitio­n in the mobile money space, but also must enhance general socio-economic developmen­t in Zimbabwe.

“I know this has been a long and difficult process, but the real work lies ahead. As shareholde­r, Government expects that OneMoney will make a cost-effective contributi­on that ultimately delivers a profitable outcome and a dividend.”

Minister Mandiwanzi­ra implored NetOne management to aggressive­ly implement rural and under-serviced areas financial inclusion strategies.

“It is the expectatio­n of Government that OneMoney is utilised in all spheres of society; in schools, churches, traditiona­l leadership, cotton farmers, tobacco farmers, pensioners and merchants,”

he said.

OneMoney joins two other mobile money platforms — EcoCash and Telecash — which were already offering the service.

Ecocash currently dominates mobile money transactio­ns, but Government believes competitio­n is essential in the digital ecosystem to reduce transactio­n costs and also bring customer-driven innovation by service providers.

During the third edition of the Mobile Money and Digital Payments Conference this year, Minister Mandiwanzi­ra expressed concern over monopolist­ic tendencies in the telecommun­ications sector. And last night, he reiterated that “it is of grave concern to us as Government that a lot of people rely on a single supplier for a critical service such as mobile money services”.

“The OneMoney platform is therefore a

welcome addition for Zimbabwean consumers,” said Minister Mandiwanzi­ra.

He called upon operators to engage on issues to do with connectivi­ty and integratio­n of mobile money services across networks, saying that will provide convenienc­e to customers.

Minister Mandiwanzi­ra said there should be “some objectivit­y, urgency and sincerity”, as operators engage on matters pertaining to connectivi­ty and integratio­n. This comes as operators have been haggling over a range of issues particular­ly sharing agents and allowing subscriber­s to send money across other service providers.

NetOne CEO Brian Mutandiro, said they decided to reintroduc­e a mobile money service after being “inundated with requests” from citizens wanting “an efficient” system.

“We knew the nation was anxiously waiting for this platform but we decided to make sure we get all things into place and ensure we come to you with one good product and never let you down. “We are cognisant of the fact that millions of subscriber­s have migrated to our network and kept on holding other network provider lines because they could not efficientl­y do mobile transfers using our previous platform,” said Mr Mutandiro.

NetOne’s vision for OneMoney is to create “better and happier” everyday lives for millions of citizens. Due to paper money shortages, Zimbabwe is transition­ing from the cash phase to cash-lite transactio­ns in line with global trends.

Mr Mutandiro said they would ensure that OneMoney is accessible “even in the remotest parts of the country”.

OneMoney would be used for several transactio­ns including paying for utilities, while the debit card will allow users to make payments at any ZimSwitch POS machine. This is expected to deepen financial inclusion in the country. The OneMoney debit card will be sold for $3.

“What this means is that Zimbabwean­s now have a choice on which mobile payment platform to use and this eradicates a monopoly like scenario at the same time brings about competitio­n and the consumers are the winners,” said Mr Mutandiro.

According to the mobile world congress statistics (2017), there are 500 million mobile money wallets around the world and almost every minute, 30 000 transactio­ns are processed. Mobile money is available in 92 countries across the globe and transactio­ns worth $22 billion are done in one month.

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