To scale up Nigeria’s mobile money market to at the sub-regional front, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) should extend licences to MTN and Airtel.
By Adeyemi Adepetun
The Head of GSMA Africa, Akinwale Goodluck, said this during a virtual interaction with some
journalists at the weekend, to dissect the recently-released ‘State of the Industry Report on Mobile Money’.Already, service providers including Globacom and 9mobile have been granted licence to do. Though penetration is still very low, analysts believe that the service has huge market potential in Nigeria.
The GSMA Head Africa said what is required to drive financial inclusion in Nigeria is the further liberalisation of the regulatory environment.
“Importantly, it is necessary that a level playing field is created, that licences are extended to the other two big network operators in Nigeria, namely Airtel and MTN. Once we have all of them on board, I think we will see mobile money accelerate and we will see the kind of numbers and growth that we want. For now, Nigeria is lagging behind some of the other countries in West Africa like Ghana, Ivory Coast,” he said.
Goodluck informed that those countries are doing very well, which is a factor of their regulatory environment. He stressed that it is a factor of the commitment of the operators, “factor of the relationship between the mobile telecommunication sector and the financial and banking sector in these countries.”
According to him, if potential mobile money uptakers do not get a sense that their mobile money accounts would allow them to transact with the generality of the people in Nigeria, “it may sort of curb appetite and limit the adoption. As long as the two biggest players in the market in Nigeria are excluded it would be very difficult to sell a mobile money proposition.
“MTN and Airtel have significant mobile money experience in other markets in sub-Saharan Africa and I am sure they would bring that experience to Nigeria, but that in itself is not necessarily a limitation for the two telcos that have already gotten licences. It is a scale game and interoperability.”
MEANWHILE, mobile money transactions rose by 65 per cent in 2020 with accounts across the globe hitting 1.2 billion, which has been propelled by the need to meet huge financial obligations during the COVID-19 period.
GSMA, which stated this, noted that there was a dramatic acceleration in mobile transactions during the COVID-19 pandemic as lockdown restrictions limited access to cash and financial institutions.
GSMA said it found out that the number of registered accounts grew by 13 per cent globally in 2020 to more than 1.2 billion – double the forecast. It stressed that the fastest growth was in markets where governments provided significant pandemic relief to their citizens.
GSMA in the report observed that to minimise the economic toll of COVID-19, many national governments distributed monetary support to individuals and businesses.
According to the report, the value of government-to-person payments quadrupled during the pandemic, with the mobile money industry working hand-in-hand with administrations and NGOs to distribute social protection and humanitarian payments quickly, securely, and efficiently to those in need.
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