Summary
- Kenyans moved Sh4.35 trillion through their mobile phones last year, fresh data by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) shows, pointing to the growing significance of the digital marketplace.
- The total transactions rose by Sh361.39 billion compared to the amount that was transacted in 2018.
- This means that an average Sh11.91 billion was transacted on mobile phones daily between January-December 2019 – some Sh990 million higher than the Sh10.92 billion daily average in 2018.
- The overall mobile payments in 2018 amounted to Sh3.98 trillion.
Kenyans moved Sh4.35 trillion through their mobile phones last
year, fresh data by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) shows, pointing to
the growing significance of the digital marketplace.
The total transactions rose by Sh361.39 billion compared to the amount that was transacted in 2018.
This
means that an average Sh11.91 billion was transacted on mobile phones
daily between January-December 2019 – some Sh990 million higher than the
Sh10.92 billion daily average in 2018. The overall mobile payments in
2018 amounted to Sh3.98 trillion.
Stephen Nduati,
former head of the national payments system at the CBK, said mobile
money platforms have transitioned from money transfer channels to
financial services platforms.
Unlike during the
formative years when the mobile money platforms were largely used for
person-to-person (P2P) cash transfers, they are now increasingly being
used to initiate and cut business deals such as purchase of goods and
services as well as processing of instant short-term loans.
“When I was still in regulation, we were working very hard to
facilitate mobile money transfers. But now, we have shifted to another
level called ‘platformisation’ where mobile money is actually a powerful
platform on which a lot of financial transactions is taking place,” Mr
Nduati, who now works as an independent consultant on mobile money
regulation, said in a recent interview.
“Financial
services such as credit are now offered on this platform which is very
flexible, thanks to the facilitative regulations. In fact, the rest of
the world copy from us, but many have not been able to craft as good
regulations as we did.”
Major sectors of the economy
such as financial services, retail and wholesale trade, agriculture and
health have integrated mobile payment platforms such as M-Pesa into
their payment systems, largely because of convenience and speed.
The CBK data indicates the value of mobile money transactions in
2019 was equivalent to 46.15 percent of the estimated size of the
Kenyan economy of Sh9.4 trillion – as measured by gross domestic product
(GDP) – assuming an expansion of 5.8 percent last year.
The
deals via mobile phones further represent 48.82 percent of Kenya’s GDP
of Sh8.9 trillion in 2018 (as captured in the Economic Survey 2019) and
56.06 percent of Sh7.75 trillion GDP in 2017.
The
Treasury had in 2016 said that mobile money transactions were deeply
entrenched in the daily lives of Kenyans, warning that a collapse of
Safaricom’s M-Pesa service, which controlled more than 99 percent of the
value of transactions, would cause widespread disruption in the
economy.
“If this system was to be compromised, the
impact would be substantial considering the linkages and the corporate
tax revenue for government,” the Treasury had warned in Budget Policy
Statement (BPS).
“Technological innovation via the
mobile money transfer services and its pivotal role in the economy
should, therefore, be given due consideration as a plausible fiscal
risk.”
Mobile money accounts crossed the 58.36 million
mark at the end of 2019, meaning that an additional 10.67 million
accounts were opened during the January-December 2019 period.
Mobile
cash transfers in December hit a monthly record Sh382.93 billion, a
growth of Sh23.67 billion over a month earlier and Sh15.16 billion
compared with December 2018.
In a quarterly report for
the period ending last September, the Communications Authority of Kenya
(CA) reported that the value of mobile commerce transactions (which
includes both transfers and withdrawals) hit nearly Sh1.63 trillion –
nearly double the Sh665.04 billion in P2P deals.
E-commerce
deals are in part driven by growth in online shopping as well as
increased uptake of instant low-value unsecured mobile loans.
The
growing deals in the digital market place has caught the eye of the
taxman which has set sights on businesses using the internet to market
and sell products subject to regulations to be issued by Treasury
Secretary Ukur Yatani.
The Kenya Revenue Authority
(KRA) has said that it will work with the CA to obtain data on mobile
and web-based transactions, which are usually completed through the
mobile money platforms.
“People don’t pay a lot of
attention to the capacity and investment done by the mobile companies,
especially Safaricom,” Mr Nduati said. “When they started, they couldn’t
do as many transactions per second. Today, they have invested heavily
to have a platform that’s running 24/7. This is helping fight cash.”
Mobile
and web-based businesses do not have physical addresses or legal
structures in the jurisdictions they operate, making it easy to escape
the taxman’s noose as well as county governments that issue business
permits. The KRA has singled out taxation of the emerging digital
economy, a headache for global revenue agencies, as a major risk to
meeting its tax goal, which has been set at Sh1.7 trillion for the
current financial year ending June 30.
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