49 million Nigerians can’t access m-money services – Investigation
49 million Nigerians can’t access m-money services – Investigation
October 05,2012 by Tunde Bello
Investigation has revealed that over 49
million adult Nigerians do not have mobile phones and, as such, cannot
immediately benefit from the mobile money scheme aimed at providing
financial inclusion for the un-banked population in the country.
Mobile money involves the transfer of money from one mobile phone to another without any need for a bank account.
Latest figure on the website of the
National Population Commission revealed that Nigeria’s population now
stands at 167 million people.
Enhancing Financial Innovation &
Access, a World Bank-backed body that aims to deepen financial inclusion
in the country, in its Access to Financial Services in Nigeria 2010
Survey, found that the country’s population comprised 82.3 per cent of
adults or over 137 million Nigerians.
Also, the National Bureau of Statistics,
in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria, carried out an
Information Communications Technology access survey in 2011 among adult
Nigerians between the ages of 15 and 60 years.
The survey, among other things, revealed
that 63.9 per cent (representing 88 million) of the country’s 137
million adults already had mobile phones.
“The access and ownership of mobile
phones across Nigeria appear as second highest after access to radio.
Total access in 2011 stood at 63.9 per cent, with half of the population
claiming ownership,” NBS said.
As such, the remaining over 49 million
people do not have mobile phones and experts lament that these people
may not immediately be able to access mobile money services aimed at
servicing the financially excluded members of the population.
Speaking on the implication of this for
the mobile money market, the Principal Associate, Mobile Money Africa,
Mr. Emmanuel Okoegwale, said though the CBN, which is the regulator of
the emerging mobile money scheme, desired that all transactions within
the mobile money ecosystem must originate from and terminate on a mobile
phone, technologically speaking, this might not be the case.
“If the use of tokens generated at agent
locations is allowed, subscribers who do not have phones to generate
tokens can visit agent locations and send same to others, who can also
visit agent outlets to collect cash,” he said.
Similarly, the Chief Executive Officer,
Paga, a mobile money company, Mr. Tayo Oviosu, said, “The fact that not
every Nigerian has a cell phone is not an issue. I cannot speak of other
operators; however, one does not need a cell phone to use Paga.
“Our agent network is a major component
of our organisation and through this network; an individual can send and
receive cash through any one of Paga’s approved agents. Those that do
not wish to visit an agent can also make use of a friend’s or relative’s
cell phone, which is customary in Nigeria.”
Speaking on what could be done to
address the problem, Okoegwale said, “In some countries, especially for
network operator-driven mobile financial services, low handset devices
can be subsidised to the end users and they are locked-in into the
network of the service provider.”
Between Oviosu and Okoegwale, no one has
ruled out the importance of owning mobile phones for mobile money
services to achieve significant penetration in the country.
According to the EFInA Access to
Financial Services survey, only 30 per cent of the adult population in
the country currently have a bank account, adding that 67.2 per cent of
the adult population have never been banked.
The survey also found that only 23.9
million of the country’s 49.2 million adults, who own mobile phones, are
currently banked. The remaining 25.3 million adults who own mobile
phones, according to the survey, are un-banked.
The report, which exemplified the
growing importance of mobile phones in the country, revealed that 56.4
million adults (66.6 per cent of the adult population) have access to a
mobile phone; 53.1 million adults (62.6 per cent of the adult
population) regularly use a mobile phone; while 49.2 million adults
(58.1 per cent of the adult population) own a mobile phone.
The Chief Executive Officer, EFInA, Mrs.
Modupe Ladipo, said this underscored the potential for using mobile
phones as a distribution channel for providing financial services to the
un-banked.
The report also revealed that Nigeria
lagged behind South Africa, Botswana and Kenya in terms of the
percentage of the population who were financially served.
culled from http://www.punchng.com
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