It used to cost three times more to transfer money within the region than from Europe to East Africa.
By ADAM IHUCHA, Special Correspondent
In Summary
- The EAPS enables traders to either make or receive cross-border payments seamlessly in real time and in their respective local currency.
- The platform, launched in November 2013, is supported by Real Time Gross Settlement systems (RTGS) operated by regional central banks.
- The EAPS was intended to slash costs and time spent on execution of money transfers within the region’s banking sector and in turn, boost trade and financial flows considered critical for economic growth.
Eight months after its launch, the East African
Payments System (EAPS) has registered modest success, lowering the cost
of money transfer and elevating the East African Community to the league
of competitive regions to send cash across borders.
The EAPS enables traders to either make or receive
cross-border payments seamlessly in real time and in their respective
local currency.
The platform, launched in November 2013, is
supported by Real Time Gross Settlement systems (RTGS) operated by Bank
of Uganda (BoU), Central Bank of Kenya(CBK) and Bank of Tanzania (BoT)
and was launched in November 2013. The EAPS was intended to slash costs
and time spent on execution of money transfers within the region’s
banking sector and in turn, boost trade and financial flows considered
critical for economic growth.
Chief economist for BoT, Alli Liyau said that
under the system they charge a flat rate of Tsh10,000 ($6.25) to
transfer bulk funds within the three countries.
“This system offers more effective funds transfer
operations because of shorter turnaround times compared with ordinary
electronic funds transfers that rely on foreign processing locations.
However, transactions registered on this platform are still relatively
few and dominated by payments for goods and services procured in the
region,” said Sam Ntulume, executive director at NIC Bank Uganda, a
subsidiary of NIC Bank of Kenya.
A report by the Overseas Development Institute had
shown; that before the EAPS, it used to cost three times more to
transfer money within the EAC than to send a similar amount from Europe
into the region.
The report indicates that to send $200 from one
country to another within the EAC used to cost up to $50; whereas
sending the same amount from the UK into the region costs $15 while the
global average cost is $8. Most of the cost of sending money is
attributed to conversion of currencies.
The EAPS supports all currencies and has
cross-border functionality, simplifying transactions and reducing the
cash that is currently lost by senders in the form of commissions and
other charges.
“Previously you needed to change Kenya shillings
into dollars then send the money. The recipient on the other side
received the dollars and changed it into local currency. These are the
costs EAPS now circumvents,” said Prof Njuguna Ndung’u, Governor of the
Central Bank of Kenya.
Service fees charged on the platform amount to
around Ush10,000 ($3.8) per transaction executed between Uganda, Kenya
and Tanzania compared with telegraphic transfers that cost between
Ush15,000 ($5.7), and Ush20,000 ($7.6) per transaction.
Turnaround times for EAPS transactions are
estimated at less than an hour while telegraphic transfers have a
settlement time of two days, according to banking industry sources.
Preliminary data from BoU shows total transaction
volumes recorded on the system between November 2013 and June 2014 stood
at 1,200 while total transaction value grossed Ush474.4 billion ($181
million), with transactions in Kenya shillings accounting for more than
50 per cent of all transactions.
Forex transactions driven by infrastructure
projects that commenced last year have dominated large transactions
recorded on the platform, followed by welfare items like school fees and
medical bills.
However, not all banks have embraced the system,
with some favouring more established global channels like Society for
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (Swift).
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