logo

Kenya pioneers 'mobile money' in Africa first

Monday, 11 June 2007


KIKUYU, Kenya, June 10, (AFP): Eyeing his cell phone with a mixture of suspicion and amazement, Paul Kangethe reads and rereads the text message he has just received.
"I've never seen anything like this before," Kangethe says of the alert that instructs him to report to the nearest cell phone shop to retrieve money his brother-in-law sent him just moments ago.
Kangethe is one of more than 65,000 registered users of M- Pesa, a mobile money transfer system recently introduced by Safaricom, Kenya's leading mobile operator, that enables people with access to a cell phone to send and receive money over their handsets in an African first.
"When he used to send me money, he would send it through the post office and it could take up to three days to receive it," Kangethe, 35, recalls, sitting in the shade of a kiosk in Kikuyu town, 20 kilometres (12.5 miles) outside of Nairobi.
From dating services to stock market listings, mobile phones are changing the face of Kenya and this newest service is forcing banks to re-evaluate their approach to inhabitants of traditionally overlooked rural areas.
More than 60 per cent of Kenyans have access to banks or microfinance institutions, but a staggering 38 per cent-mostly living in rural areas-are entirely unbanked, according to data collected by Financial Sector Deepening Kenya (FSDK).
However, more than half the population either owns or has access to a mobile phone, generating a new means by which banking and financial services could be provided, according to Safaricom's Chief Financial Officer Les Baillie.
"By providing this service, we're, in a sense, bringing banking to the unbanked," Baillie told AFP.
M-Pesa users can send up to 35,000 Kenyan Shillings (525 dollars, 390 euros) per transaction and keep up to 50,000 Kenyan Shillings in a "virtual account" for later use.
To use the service, senders hand over funds to a Safaricom shop to be converted into "mobile money" that is "transferred" by text to the recipient, who then withdraws it as cash at another Safaricom shop.
The fees for sending and withdrawing run up to 170 shillings (2.55 dollars, 1.89 euros), a mere fraction of the cost charged by other money transfer agencies, which ask for up to 10 per cent of the amount being sent.