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Africa Pioneers Mobile Bank Push

Issue 386

Front Page

News Headlines

French Embassy Official Praises Somaliland Democracy

National Examinations Scheduled For June 20th

Somaliland President Visits Kuwait

Muse Bihi Warns Somaliland Clerics

Maryam Mursal Builds School In Hargeysa

Garaad Saleebaan Daahir AF-Qarshe Passes Away

DRC Donates Tools Of The Trade To Borama Barbers

Candlelight Helps The Needy In Erigavo

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Extends Bid Round For Hydrocarbon Exploration Until December 2009

U.S. Condemns Murder of Omar Hashi

Top Somali Warlord: Willing To Talk?

Mobile Phone Banking For Somalia

Imperial Jets Assisting With Evacuations From Battle-Worn Region Of Somalia

Somali Security Minister Killed-President

The United States Seeks To Engage Eritrea

World Condemns Suicide Car Bombings In Somalia

IGAD: Wayward Means To Sully Eritrea

Africa Pioneers Mobile Bank Push

Somaliland Gives Suitors Breathing Space

Telesom Launches Zad Mobile Banking Service In Somalia

Mogadishu Police Chief Among 22 Killed In Clashes

Puntland Minister Says Positive Feedback From Ethiopia Visit

Editorial

Is Said Samatar Mourning The Death Of Somali Literature Or The Death Of His Views On Somali Literature?

Features & Commentary

Somaliland's Lovesick Baker And The Girl He Never Had

From Corporate America To The Horn Of Africa, Money Makes The World Go Around

Just Another Day For Hargeysa's Street Children

Burgeoning Population Drains Hargeysa Water Supply

I’ve Learnt To Share Power Like Nelson Mandela, Says Morgan Tsvangirai

Ethiopia - A Source Country For Trafficked People - State Department

Weapons For Warlords: Arms Trafficking In The Gulf Of Aden

Kenya: Unfinished Business - Moving Forward

Somaliland: Postponed Elections Create Chaos

Obama Will Back Green Energy In Asian And Indonesia

How To Make Friends And Influence People

International News

 

Sect. Of State Hillary Clinton Resting After Surgery On Broken Elbow

Iran's Supreme Leader Calls For Calm, Rules Out Vote Rigging

UNHCR Annual Report Shows 42 Million People Uprooted Worldwide

Opinion

Politics Has Earned Such A Bad Name For Itself! So Imagine When Bad People Used

Somaliland Is Here To Stay!

President Obama Can Empower Africans

Monday, 15 June 2009
Mobile financial services in the developing world could be worth $5bn by 2012, say analysts.
CGAP - a consortium that works to expand financial services in developing countries - said the growth in mobile coverage was helping to fuel growth.
More than one billion people in the developing world have access to a mobile phone, but no bank account.
In February 2009, Bill Gates pledged $12.5m (£8.6m) to help the world's poor access banking services.
The Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP) said it thought the number of people with access to a mobile phone, but no bank account, would to rise to 1.7 billion in 2012.
It also expected more than one in five to use their mobile to access banking services, creating a market worth up to $5bn (£3.05bn).
"There's a lot of excitement, but very little understanding what's going on," said Mark Pickens, microfinance analyst at CGAP.
He said that mobile operators were ideally placed to launch mobile banking services in the developing world as banks were unlikely to put in the huge investment required to set up branches across a country.
"Customers have already purchased point of sale - it's in their pocket," he said.
One of Africa's first mobile banking system, M-Pesa, launched in Kenya in March 2007.
A network of more than 7,000 agents - mostly shopkeepers - was set up to take deposits and issue cash, with users authorising payments on their mobile phone using a Pin code.
That service has now expanded to include Tanzania and Afghanistan with plans to launch in India, Egypt and South Africa.
Safaricom, East Africa's biggest mobile operator, said it expected M-Pesa to generate a profit this year. Other firms, such as South Africa's MTN and Kuwait's Zain are piloting services similar to M-Pesa.
A similar service has also launched in the northern Somali region of Somaliland.

 


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