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Mobile Money and the Unbanked: How Mobile Payments Can Support Financial Inclusion in Emerging Markets

Mobile Money and the Unbanked: How Mobile Payments Can Support Financial Inclusion in Emerging Markets

The shift to a cashless society was already underway before the pandemic hit. Nevertheless, the COVID-19 has accelerated years’ worth of digital transformation within the space of a few short months.

From contactless spending to the rise of e-wallets, it’s an exciting time for consumers as digital innovation offers easier and more flexible ways to pay. But it’s important we don’t forget that a large percentage of the population doesn’t even have a bank account – the unbanked.

The global unbanked 

Historically, when it comes to digital payments innovation, the focus has been on the banked eighty percent, as payment providers seek innovative ways to simplify transactions and offer new products and incentives to those that already have access to banking services.

Yet financial opportunities with the unbanked should not be forgotten, nor underestimated. With 1.7 billion adults totally unbanked globally – i.e. people that don’t use banks or banking services in any capacity – the scale of the opportunity for the payments industry is sizeable.

Furthermore, the World Bank reports that access to financial services has been demonstrated to not only support global economies but help lift people out of poverty. From a social standpoint, it is vital that these communities are not left behind.

Mobile innovation

While this market may be unbanked, they are not necessarily off-grid. Two-thirds of the unbanked population has a mobile phone, making mobile money the go-to solution for these groups.

In Africa, the market leader in mobile money, M-Pesa, currently processes over a billion transactions a month, providing vital access to banking services and powering local economies. For financial services providers, then, it is the mobile phone that holds the key to innovation and expanding in emerging markets.

Mobile money was developed in response to people’s desire to keep their cash safe and transfer it to others across distances. With mobile money, neither a bank account nor an ATM is required to make this possible. Instead by using a SIM card money can be stored, sent and received via a mobile phone. This means that agents, often local shopkeepers, can facilitate transactions by providing and receiving funds.

Making payments simple 

The simplicity of the system has allowed it to reach far and wide both in cities and, importantly, in rural destinations, which may be many miles from a brick-and-mortar bank.

Mobile money has revolutionized payments for many of the unbanked by providing a safe way to transfer funds between family and friends as well as pay for goods and services.

In doing so, it has democratized financial services, shifting power away from the traditional banking system and into the hands of the people who use mobile money every day.

Progressing mobile payments

The mobile money services that exist today, however, are just the tip of the iceberg. There has been limited innovation from financial services providers in response to consumer behavior in emerging markets, such as Africa and South East Asia, where mobile banking infrastructure is more sophisticated than much of the developed world.

As detailed in a recent McKinsey report, mobile money presents a ‘dual promise’ for customers and financial institutions alike. Not only serving as a driver of financial inclusion for the unbanked, but a means for payment providers to scale and grow in emerging markets.

For companies looking to offer financial services in these regions, education must be first on their agenda. While it’s critical that services are available to those who require them, it’s ultimately awareness and understanding of what’s being offered that will drive uptake among the unbanked population.

A final thought

The unbanked opportunity isn’t just limited to emerging markets either. There area staggering 1.3 million unbanked in the UK alone, as well as many more ‘underbanked’ consumers who still favour cash – often out of concern for privacy or simple preference.

If the payments industry is serious about bringing everyone along on the digital payments journey, it must listen to the concerns of the unbanked and do more to make banking services accessible to all. When it comes to financial inclusion, the smart money is on mobile.

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