Business a.m.

Digital pensions platform, informal market, and making it work in Africa

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Caesar Keluro, co-founder and CEO, Nanocentri­c Technologi­es Limited, leads ‘Make In West Africa’, a regional think-tank; and can be reached on +234 806 300 2817 (text only) or gurucaesar@gmail.com. Twitter:@KCaesar

AFRICAN INFORMAL WORKERS dominate its workforce. For Nigeria, about 80 percent of her workforce is in the informal market. As the African market evolves with the growing success of Fintechs, we can finally bring “micro-pension” schemes to millions of Africans in the informal market. In an ambitious effort to create inclusive and affordable micro-pension schemes, the countries of Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, South Africa, and Uganda are pushing the buttons forward.

They are helping craft inclusive and affordable micro-pension schemes targeting their large informal sector workforce. PenCom, the Nigerian regulator, is aiming to cover 30 percent of her workforce through the Contributo­ry Pension Scheme (CPS) by 2024. The Micro Pension Scheme could help Africa access a huge pool of capital to drive infrastruc­ture transforma­tion. But we have to move rapidly from the old-school pension plans: hefty fees, high minimum contributi­ons, and needless regulatory penalties and missed payments.

Technology is improving pension access. African firms should take advantage of these fintech disruption­s by forging strategic partnershi­ps with technology platforms. Yet, we must connect this with quality personal services. Taking the mass market online would remain difficult except data and smartphone prices keep falling drasticall­y. But taking African young people is a possible market and companies should look out for this as it will bring down inefficien­cies and help firms make sense of the post-Covid19 world.

Enjoying the benefits of techenable­d pension services would mean African firms can prioritize investment in this new technology. Every African firm should make significan­t investment­s in technology as part of its growth strategy driven by a focus on innovation in the pension market as well as efficient and timely support of the informal market through a digital layering of existing informal structures.

Digital layering and pensions platforms digital

We can accelerate pension access through digital pensions platforms which can make services more efficient for informal market members and employers, with the capacity to support an end-to-end, collaborat­ive approach. We believe overlayeri­ng extensive online capabiliti­es on informal market structures could help informal traders and workers see their benefits and edit personal data as well as initiating, tracking, or completing processes by ‘Online.’ The African informal market is driven by tribal associatio­ns, enforcemen­t systems (pressure groups), and a wide network of influence age groups who can bring control and enable better collection of pensions.

Infusing digital pension platforms into the African informal market is a brilliant opportunit­y for digital layering of this market. While African firms would realize significan­t processing savings, going digital by providing this informal market with tools (both digital and others), can help us save time spent chasing informal market workers who are skeptical about pensions.

Digital layering the informal market with pension products allows employers and administra­tors to collaborat­e efficientl­y, quickly solving issues and keeping track of all informal market pension actions with a full audit trail. A simple form collecting trader data enabled by chatbot functions on this trader online member portal will allow them to make simple queries that can be answered quickly and seen by all involved on that group platform. It is simply giving informal workers with basic learning capacity or digital training and tools to self-manage, as well as collective­ly, for the whole group.

We can’t automate now for the informal market

Micro-pension is hard. Dealing with the informal market in collecting micro-pension or even enhanced schemes remains hard. But a digital layering of this market with a funnel system that keeps taking data of participan­ts would help us keep fine-tuning micro-pension products and their likes. That must be anchored on a strong focus on governance, risk management, and efficiency, enabling demand for these pension schemes to continue to grow.

Digital layering of this informal market boosted by self-service portals can go hand in hand with improved service levels which can make pension attractive for the informal market. Then we can draw in more robust data insights and we can gradually introduce automation and self-service capabiliti­es, which will significan­tly improve their experience, reduce costs and backlogs. Note that automated processes and workflows, while they can eliminate human error, can also assist in maximizing control of risk, while giving peace of mind around compliance with pension regulation­s.

A pension scheme with the future in mind

Digital layering the informal market for pension management or collection can help operators make decisions as accurate comprehens­ive data gets funneled into such platforms, reducing the need for human involvemen­t. More data would boost automation capabiliti­es of pension operators, enable informal market customers and their platform managers to adopt an ‘Administra­tion by Exception’ servicing model; where work only goes to a human when something is missing, or the query is complex and requires input from a pension administra­tor/expert.

It is only normal that the next step is to harness artificial intelligen­ce which can offer us even higher levels of automation at a lower cost. For instance, we can enhance the informal market member experience by using AI chatbots on online member portals to quickly address member questions as our understand­ing of this market grows in the years ahead.

Finally, there is growing proof that technology platforms make a real difference to how we engage the informal market. Digital solutions can boost pension schemes for informal market members, especially bringing access to this market and, importantl­y, crunching the available data to enable us to serve the informal market better. Advances in areas such as artificial and assisted intelligen­ce and improved data analytics can help us expand not only access but deliver prosperity to all. But African pension providers must change the way they think and operate, digital layering the informal market networks patiently could impact their success in a post COVID-19 world and beyond. business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessam­live.com

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