The United Nations Secretary-General (UNSG) António Guterres on
August 26, 2020, launched a report of his Task Force on Digital
Financing of the Sustainable Development Goals (The Taskforce), on which
I have served for the last 18 months.
The report titled, "People's Money: Harnessing Digitalisation to Finance a Sustainable Future,"
focuses on the needs of ordinary people. The financial system, the
report concludes, must serve individual citizens, as savers, investors,
borrowers, and taxpayers.
It must leverage digital technology to put people back in the
driver's seat of their finances, so that they can invest in themselves
and their families, communities, countries, and the planet. Governments,
regulators, and financial institutions should support and facilitate
the disruptions that will get us there.
Launching the report, the UNSG António Guterres said, ''Digital
technologies, which are revolutionising financial markets, can be a
game-changer in meeting our shared objectives. The Task Force on Digital
Financing of the Sustainable Development Goals provides leadership to
harness the digital revolution.''
Digitisation can propel us towards achieving the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs). The global response to the coronavirus
pandemic crisis demonstrates how digitisation can be harnessed to
support vulnerable people, reduce inequalities, sustain livelihoods, and
maintain our social fabric.
Harnessing digitalisation to develop a citizen-centric financial
system to accelerate financing for the SDGs requires the development of
digital financing ecosystems. Governments and regulators are seeking to
support digital financing ecosystems through infrastructure development,
active industry engagement, supportive regulatory frameworks, and
demand-side capacity building.
Digital finance
In the East African Community (EAC), we have been at the frontier of
digital finance. Since 2007, digital financial services have transformed
our financial sector and indeed the lives of East Africans. During the
pandemic, EAC countries including Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, and Tanzania
have been global leaders in encouraging the use of mobile money to
address the health and economic dimensions of Covid-19.
Measures including waiver of charges on low-value mobile money
transactions and enhancement of mobile money limits have facilitated
official and personal transfers across the region in a time of great
need.
Notably, the Taskforce drew significant inspiration from the advances
in digital finance in the EAC. This included a convening in Nairobi in
July 2019 during the Afro-Asia Fintech Festival. The Taskforce supported
a Hackathon launched at the festival to draw on innovative ideas from
African fintechs on how to leverage technology to support financing of
the SDGs.
Not surprisingly, the two winners were from EAC countries – Kenya and
Uganda – with solutions on how to promote savings through Savings and
Credit Co-operatives and financing of sustainable coffee value chains.
The 2020 edition of the Hackathon held on August 31 sought to harness
the use of technology in addressing the health and economic impacts of
the Covid-19 pandemic, and has seen a positive response from EAC
fintechs.
The EAC has made giant strides in harnessing digital finance, but much more is needed.
There remains a significant gap in funding of the SDGs in
infrastructure, health, education and social services. This SDG
financing gap particularly in health and education has widened with the
adverse effects of the pandemic.
Our Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) remain grossly
underfunded, yet they are at the heart of our economies. With the
increasing linkages between our countries, economies of scale are
imperative for digital business models. This can be achieved by building
regional ecosystems.
The EAC already has a long history of co-operation on a wide array of
socio-economic issues including responding to emerging technologies.
One of the report's key recommendations is on the building of regional
digital financing ecosystems. In particular, the East Africa region is
identified as a prime candidate for such a system.
Increasing the market would allow the full benefits of digitalisation
to be realised. Building local demand and encouraging widespread
adoption of digital financing by users and incumbent financial sector
players requires a deepening of domestic and regional markets.
An EAC digital financing ecosystem would expand the market for
financial solutions aligned to SDGs, promote regional cooperation and
governance. More importantly, it would bring more of our citizens into
the financial system, support economic growth, and shared prosperity.
SDG aligned digital finance solutions would increase access to
critical social services including education, health, water and
sanitation and infrastructure. We would also be able to innovatively
catalyse lending to our MSMEs across the region by addressing their key
barriers particularly lack of physical collateral.
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has been collaborating with the
Monetary Authority of Singapore over the last two years, to learn how to
foster a vibrant financial-technology sector that stretches across
Africa and Asia. The EAC is a natural foundation for this initiative and
CBK stands ready to work with other policymakers, regulators, private
sector players, and fintechs in realising this vision of a regional
digital finance ecosystem.
Undoubtedly, with opportunities comes risks. As we grow digital
finance across the region, cyber risk comes to mind as a significant
systemic risk.
To their credit, EAC Central Banks are already working to jointly
develop common cybersecurity regulatory standards. This will enhance
cybersecurity information sharing, coordination, and strengthen our
defenses as digital finance scales up across the region.
This is a historic opportunity to harness digitalisation in reshaping
finance that must be grasped now, given the urgency to finance the
SDGs, the short window of change resulting from a period of digital
disruption, and the potential to maintain the digital momentum of the
current crisis.
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