Thursday, 16 February 2012

‘NIBSS handles N20tr retail transactions’


The Nigeria Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS) has said that it processed 32 million retail transactions worth about N20 trillion in 2011.
  The Acting Managing Director, NIBSS, Niyi Ajao disclosed this at the weekend in an interview with The Nation.
  He said that the transactions took place in NIBSS’s locations in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, Ilorin, Ibadan, Enugu and Benin.
He assured of adequate electronic payment infrastructure needed  for the effective implementation of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) moderated cash-less banking initiative. Already, NIBSS at the instance of the Bankers’ Committee has acquired cutting edge technologies for the operation of the Nigeria Central Switch (NCS), which is crucial to the effective takeoff of the cash-less banking initiative.

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Lagos Cashless Initiative; Strapped to a Whimpering Rocket


The Cashless Initiative should rocket the economy of Nigeria to greater heights. That was the plan.
Picture the Nigerian economy precariously strapped to the back of a badass rocket standing ramrod straight in the sweltering sun. Yes, the sun in Lagos is something else.
Then the CBN Governor steps forward gallantly to light the rocket with a lighted match (or is it cigarette lighter – now isn’t that dangerous?) expecting a loud boom, a shudder then after the smoke clears the rocket has taken us to nirvana. Ok. That didn’t happen. The rocket whimpered, rose a bit and crashed back with a thud, a thousand pieces of pewter Naira coins scattered in all directions; a lorry load of disappointment plastered on its metal face. Now Sanusi would know how ladies tied to one minute men feel. Utter dejection in the face of needed performance of a life-time.
Allegory aside, everyone knows that cashless initiative is going to be driven largely by POS (not what you think it is – it is Point of sales terminal). POS needs connectivity. Connectivity is only possible with mobile data. That is standard in Nigeria. Anyone who talks of wired broadband for something like POS should be strapped to a gurney at Aro.
That brings us to state of mobile data in Nigeria. This is a market that is practically begging to be exploited and yet the Telcos are not better than POS (the other one). Heard that NIBSS got into bed with MTN and Glo for POS connectivity but all I have gotten are screams of anger by frustrated card holders because POS don’t work well with POS (other one one) connectivity.

CBN Inaugurates New Committee to Tackle Electronic Money Fraud


In order to mitigate the flow of electronic fraud forecasted to follow the introduction of Cashless Nigeria, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has inaugurated a new committee baptized the Automated Teller Machine Fraud Prevention Committee.

Mobile money technology: not easy, but why?


In recent months, unflattering headlinesin response to technology related challenges. When the technology platforms through which mobile money services are delivered experience downtime, customers are unable to transact and agents are unable to earn a living. Understandably, both quickly become distressed. Recent headlines have brought attention to this problem, but to be clear, it’s neither new, nor limited in scope to a couple of deployments: for years, the world has read about M-PESA’s downtime in Kenyaon Twitter, and countless other services have faced similar challenges to varying degrees that, because they are smaller, haven’t attracted the same headlines.

NIGERIA: ENHANCING CASHLESS ECONOMY THROUGH MOBILE BANKING


By John Omachonu, Business Day Online
The pilot scheme of the cashless policy currently being experimented in Lagos is facing some challenges. The e-payment policy is aimed at reducing cost of cash management by banks, and consequently, reducing lending rates. The direct implication is that it will lead to financial inclusion.
For Nigeria to achieve its vision of 20:2020, all hands must be on deck. A major derivative of this policy – mobile money services – appears to have taken off too with the launch of the service by a number of institutions. Their efforts are expected to make the policy a success.
BusinessDay investigations have revealed that overall, 73 percent of adult Nigerians have no formal or informal access to finance and therefore are excluded from access to credit facilities. In fact, according to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) the unbanked money in the informal sector is estimated at a staggering N1.2 trillion.
Mobile banking is the person-to-person payment through the mobile phone or the use of mobile phones to conduct financial transactions. It is the latest electronic banking innovation and a revolution changing the lives of millions across the globe.
It also refers to the various components required to deliver mobile payment to the banking and non-banking community, with the overriding vision of achieving a nationally utilised and internationally recognised payment systems.
First Bank of Nigeria, UBA/Afripay, GTBank, MobileMoney, Stanbic IBTC, and Ecobank have the licenses to partner telecommunications companies to bring about the desired mobile banking. Others are Fortis MFB, Pagatech, Paycom, Chams, E-Tranzact, FET (Funds Electronic Transfer), Monitiz, Parkway, Corporeti Services, Eartholeum, and M-Kudi.
Their efforts are expected to expand and deepen formal banking in Nigeria by drawing the unbanked or under-banked into the formal financial services sector, while also enabling the economy to shift to more efficient and reliable modes of financial transactions.
For a country with an estimated population of over 150 million and, which curiously, has less than 22 million bank accounts, such policies are not only good but are necessary. BusinessDay investigations revealed that about 74 percent of the adult Nigerian population have never been banked, while 85 percent of adult females are completely unbanked. On the other hand, 61 percent of the unbanked would like to have a bank account, according to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
The development has impacted negatively on the country’s economic growth and development because access to financial services, and indeed overall financial development, is crucial to economic growth and poverty reduction. The lack of access to formal financial services limits market exchanges, increases risk and limits opportunities to save. Without formal financial services, households rely on informal services that are associated with high transaction costs. Thus, increasing access to formal financial services to the majority of households remains an important policy goal, not just in Nigeria, but in all emerging markets.
Many have expressed doubts about Nigeria’s readiness for a cashless economy, mainly due to the unavailability of requisite infrastructure and low literacy levels, while others have also argued that ongoing reforms have generated ample momentum to leverage on all forms of e-payment, especially mobile payment to enhance financial inclusion and facilitate Nigeria’s transformation from cash-based to a cashless economy.
Mitchell Elegbe, Interswitch Group’s CEO and managing director, said there was no alternative to cashless policy if the economy is to achieve its desired aim of being among the top 20 economies by the year 2020.
Elegbe reiterated that the high unbanked situation poses a challenge to the policy, while calling for democratisation of the policy to enable majority of Nigerians use it, particularly mobile banking. The need for different types of cards either for debit or credit, according to him, is necessary for the success of the policy.
Head of Personal and Business Banking at Stanbic IBTC Bank, Obinnia Abajue, during a recent Mobile Money Roundtable, argued that the adoption of mobile money services in Nigeria would enhance economic planning by unraveling the country’s actual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) matrix, with a reduction in the cost of cash handling as well as cost of funds, besides being convenient and secure.
Abajue stated: “Government and banks have been at the forefront of efforts seeking to channel the huge funds in the informal sector through the formal banking system to bolster economic development.
Mobile money will fast track this harmonisation and identify economically active people previously in the shadows of the huge informal cash economy, enabling them to have access to credit facilities.”
“Mobile money,” he stressed, “will bring about transparency, improved remittances and economic activities across various sectors of the economy, both in urban and rural areas. To achieve this, it is imperative for the regulators, licensed operators and other stakeholders to embark on an awareness campaign to educate Nigerians about the benefits of mobile money. This will drive its acceptance, and subsequently unravel its enormous benefits to the economy.”
Across Africa, mobile banking is projected to become a $22 billion industry by 2015, according to Juniper Research, a consultancy outfit, buoyed by soaring cell-phone use and growing financial services demand. Correspondingly, mobile network operators will earn $7.8billion in direct and indirect revenues from serving a projected 364 million low income, unbanked people in about 147 countries who are projected to use financial services by 2012.

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

MOBILE MONEY: HOW READY IS NIGERIA?


• Sanusi Lamido, CBN Governor
The granting of licences to 11 mobile money operators last year by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN); the offer of operational platform by telecom companies and the eventual commencement of business by the operators all but point to the impending payment system revolution and the consequent evolution of e-commerce in Nigeria.


These spring directly from the objective of the Mobile Money Service (MMS) as spelt out by the Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN) . According to the apex bank, MMS is to promote savings as well as enable people carry out financial transactions, including sending and receiving monies from phone. It also enables subscriber to buy airtime both for self and others, pay bills, pay for goods and services in shops and on the internet.

In other words, your handset has become your wallet; your cash-in-transit. Carrying wallet about will soon be rendered obsolete like a fad waiting to fade out fast.

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