By TEA REPORTER
Ugandan customers can now make mobile
money transactions with Kenya following a deal between Safaricom and MTN
Uganda, a move seen to boost trade between the two countries.
This partnership comes months after Safaricom
roped in Vodacom Tanzania and MTN Rwanda to introduce cross-border
transaction between customers on the respective networks.
Betty Mwangi, Safaricom’s financial services
director, said that the initiative will provide a reliable and
affordable way for businesses to transact across borders.
“This move by the private sector complements
economic initiatives spearheaded by the East African Community heads of
state,” Ms Mwangi said.
Uganda is one of Kenya’s top trading partners
and the pact is not only expected to increase trade between the two
nations, but also to offer cheaper remittance services.
High demand for M-Pesa in Uganda has seen
unauthorised usage of the service for years driven mainly by the high
Kenyan student population and traders operating from Kampala and other
towns in the country.
Safaricom has over 22 million M-Pesa users while about five million MTN customers use mobile money in Africa.
“Our subscribers will be able to cash out at
any of our 55,000 agents across the country,” said Phrase Lubega, MTN
financial services general manager.
The transactions infrastructure between the two networks has
been enabled by MFS Africa, which develops and distributes mobile
financial solutions to markets across Africa.The funds will be sent in Kenyan shillings and received in Ugandan
shillings, based on the prevailing exchange rate as at midnight, says
the telcos.
MFS Africa’s Chief Executive Officer, Dare Okoudjou said, “We
are confident that the cashless revolution that started in Kenya almost a
decade ago, will now unlock not only intra-African remittances but also
serve as a catalyst for trade and economic growth in the region.”
Diaspora remittances have become a new
battlefront in the financial services sector where transaction
commissions have become big revenue earners for commercial banks and
mobile money operators.
The cost of international remittances through
traditional channels like banks or money transfer operators can be up to
31 per cent of the transaction, depending on the service provider.
In the past year Safaricom has been on an
expansion plan for its mobile money transfer service M-Pesa across the
region, after the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) awarded it a cash
remittance operating licence last year enabling it to carry out money
transfers out of the country.
Before licensing the telco was not allowed to
handle outward cash transmission even to neighbouring Uganda or Tanzania
and had been offering one-sided international cash transfer services
moving money into Kenya through partners such as Western Union and
MoneyGram.
To access the service, Ugandan customers will be required to dial *840# and follow the prompts.
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