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Where is West Africa's MPESA?

By: Dr Tope Fasua

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  • In Kenya I found something different. Totally different. You can withdraw up to 40,000 Kenyan Shillings in a single withdrawal at any Automated Teller Machine (ATM). This is like N220,000. And you can do that several times daily.

 

So, in Kenya they have had this MPESA innovation in payment systems which makes it easy for
commerce especially at the micro level. This innovation has been around since 2007 and has helped
greatly in financial and economic inclusion by enabling the poorest of the poor to get finances through
transfers and remittances, but most importantly for their trades. M-PESA (which stands for M for Mobile,
and Pesa for the Swahili word for money or payment) must have lifted many millions from abject
poverty. They don’t have to enter the snazzy offices of local banks to get involved in commerce. They are
also enabled to avoid many banking fees. This is technological enablement, and it is remarkable that it has
been on for 16 years in East Africa. Nigeria is only recently trying to play catchup with those account
where your phone number is also your account number. People here still go through many difficulties
making simple payments here and we have only recently passed through an incredibly difficult time with
some experiments by our apex bank here to get people to adopt electronic payment by force.

In Kenya I found something different. Totally different. You can withdraw up to 40,000 Kenyan Shillings
in a single withdrawal at any Automated Teller Machine (ATM). This is like N220,000. And you can do
that several times daily. So, through ATMs you can withdraw at least an equivalent of about N1million a
day. BUT most people don't use cash. Cash has become an oddity even for the poorest. It's unlikely a taxi
driver will find change for you if you hand him cash. So there comes M-PESA. Once you get a Safaricom
sim card you can load money on it from your local account or with cash. It makes your life easier on the
streets. Banana sellers and street vendors use M-PESA. It's so quick and easy. The confirmation text
arrives immediately. Click on the app, click SEND MONEY, add phone number and amount, add your 4-
digit password and boom! It is done. 20 seconds inside traffic. Even BEGGARS in front of the malls
remind you they take MPESA.

And MPESA is used in the entire East Africa. They’ve somehow been able to extend its use up to
Pakistan and Bangladesh, as well as south African countries like Zambia, Malawi, and Botswana. All you
need to send a daily maximum of 200,000 Kenyan Shillings (close to N1.2 million if you use our street
rates) to a friend or business partner for any purpose, is that app, and 20 seconds. I can imagine the
velocity of transactions in that region, and the financial, economic and market integration. The
cooperation in that region is palpable especially with a few countries like Uganda and Rwanda being
landlocked yet they clear their goods seamlessly and the economies are growing.

Now, I have passed through many agonies trying to make payments to people in Ghana for instance. That
is our sister anglophone country in Africa. Forget trying to make payments to francophone countries in
West Africa. Forget places like Sierra Leone or Liberia or The Gambia where they also speak English.
Forget next door in Niger, Chad, Cameroon or Benin. You have to go through black market/illegal
channels and you are seriously on your own if anything goes wrong. I don't know if Moniepoint,
Palmpay, Opay and the rest who have come up in Nigeria now have cross-border capabilities. I doubt.
These things take deliberateness and mindful planning and cooperation. The last time I was running
around Ecobank trying to make a payment in Ghana…with no luck. I once had to send Western Union
from London to Ghana to a Nigerian friend at great cost when I could have used something akin to M-
PESA.

West Africa is lagging the world on most indices. And Nigeria is a major factor for that lag. We need to
step up and do more. If francophone countries are not cooperating let us talk with anglophone countries.
East Africans are surging ahead. I looked at Nigerian banks in Kenya…UBA, GT, Access etc.. and they
looked like fish out of water. They have little business in Kenya. I doubt if they are growing too. Kenyan
financial market is far more developed than ours. Kenya is leveraging on tech development for its

financial sector and they have about 30 local banks and 20 foreign banks including those from India such
as Bank of Baroda and Bank of India, ABSA and FirstRand from South Africa, Standard Chartered from
UK, Bank of Kigali from Rwanda, Bank of China, Dubai Islamic Bank, Citibank, JPMorgan, Habib Bank
Zurich and others.

Nigeria's financial sector had better take urgent notice and wake up. Our Banks should also ensure that
they are not stymieing innovations because of short term dominance. Central Bank of Nigeria should also
ensure it does serious research within Africa before solidifying some of its policies. East Africa has a lot
to teach us. No wonder I felt the economic buzz in Kenya. I felt immediately that they had built a resilient
economy that was including the poorest of the poor. No nation is perfect by the way.

Fun fact. I saw one ATM that disbursed US Dollar at SARIT CENTRE. It belongs to I&M Bank. I was
like ‘impossible’. That dollar part of the ATM will be empty. I tried it though. And I was wrong. Lo and
behold the thing worked! People could withdraw $2,000 at a go, or more. Honestly, I was shocked. You
couldn’t even do this in the UAE or UK! I asked myself ‘how come Kenyans aren't queueing up emptying
the dollars’? They simply are not interested. Kenyans know their place and are working upwards
gradually but surely. Not even the inherent but subtle racism and tribalism in their system can stop them.
So, I see it as a great favour when Uhuru Kenyatta comes here to share experience. Here, we don't know
our places. Everybody is a big man. Kenyans are corrupt but they keep their money in their country. Here
we are totally externalised in our thinking. It starts with thinking it's an achievement to send your children
to nursery schools abroad, or to ‘japa’ and live there. Young and old, we hold our country in disdain. Our
governments have serious faults. But so do we the people. I saw that like Europe, or Morocco or Rwanda,
most of the cars of Kenyan streets are small 1.3litre engine cars; cars that many Nigerians will never be
caught dead driving. We usually have a derogatory name or another for such cars.

Fun fact number 2. Petrol sells for 182.5. Higher grade Shell sells for 190 Shillings. If 137 Shillings
equals one US Dollar, and 760 naira equals $1, then multiply 182.5 by 5.55. That is N1,012 per litre for
petrol. I wondered how they survive it, but they do. Your uber/bolt is likely to veer off into the next filling
station without even asking you to by just 5 litres of petrol and then move on.

Back to the question? Where is West Africa's MPESA? What is all the gragra about our smart bankers?
Is Nigerian banking stuck in the past? Perhaps endangered? No wonder it was easy for the Kenyan
Central Bank to single out and slam some of our fintech companies for alleged money laundering. Their
system is just quite advanced out East, and surveillance is sharp. We need to really wake up out West.
Who will bell the cat?

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