Corporate News
By OKUTTAH MARK, mokuttah@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Some fuel station dealers are charging 0.5 per cent commission on the value of every payment made through Lipa na M-Pesa service.
- The dealers have cite low profit margins in the tightly regulated industry.
Safaricom
customers using the Lipa na M-Pesa service to buy fuel will have to pay
a 0.5 per cent commission on the value of every payment made through
the system.
This follows a decision by some fuel station dealers to pass
on half of the one per cent commission charges that they pay to
Safaricom to their customers citing low profit margins in the tightly
regulated industry.
A motorist spending Sh2,000 for fuel and using
Safaricom’s mobile money wallet will pay Sh10 more compared to a person
paying using cash or plastic cards.
Safaricom CEO Bob Collymore on Wednesday said the charge on Lipa na M-Pesa users was limited to some petrol stations.
“Lipa na M-Pesa service is still free to end users,
however some petrol stations are charging 0.5 per cent of the total
value,” Mr Collymore told the Business Daily in a telephone interview.
Petrol station owners currently pay a one per cent
commission on the value of every payment made through Lipa na M-Pesa
from the initial 1.5 per cent that Safaricom used to charge during the
first months of the service.
Banks charge traders between three and five per
cent commission on credit and debit card swipes made by customers,
making Lipa na M-Pesa the cheapest cashless payment option for
businesses.
The service has registered 49,413 business owners who receive an average of Sh11.6 billion worth of payments per month.
“As a matter of transparency, we are running a
campaign to inform our consumers about this, warning them that they may
attract some charges in some of the petrol stations,” said Mr
Collymore.
Shopkeepers, kiosks, saloons and vehicle garage
owners must register their businesses with Safaricom and get a special
till number to offer the service which is seen as the mobile telecom
firm’s reply to plastic money and other forms of cashless transactions.
The service can be used to pay for any transaction
valued at between Sh10 and Sh70,000. With ordinary M-Pesa transactions a
customer buying goods worth Sh500 has to include a Sh27 withdrawal fee
amounting to additional costs for the same product compared to cash
buyers.
Swiping to pay bills
Data released by the Central Bank of Kenya in
February shows that payments made using plastic cards dipped nearly
one-fifth last year, the first drop in five years, as swiping to pay
bills took a beating from the buoyant mobile money industry.
The data indicated that card payments dipped 17.4 per cent to Sh1.2 trillion last year compared to Sh1.5 trillion in 2013.
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