Archive

Author Archive


USAID Releases Mobile Financial Services Risk Matrix

By: Camilo Tellez: July 29th, 2010

Mobile Financial Services offer significant opportunities for improving the efficiency of financial services by expanding access and lowering transaction costs. The explosive growth of use of mobile money has had the unintended benefit of increasing public involvement in the formal financial system, including expansion of savings accounts in the regulated financial intermediaries.

Mobile World Live 2010: Untapped Areas of Growth and Opportunities for Mobile Money

By: Camilo Tellez: June 28th, 2010

Entering a new market touches every part of a company’s strategy; from technology, marketing, and customer service to product offerings, pricing and distribution channels. In the following two presentations, Olga Morawczynski from AppLab (Grameen Foundation) and Daryl Collins from Bankable Frontiers and Author of Portfolios of the Poor discuss ways to build on the basic mobile money proposition by understanding the unbanked customer’s needs.

Methodology for Assessing Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Risks

By: Camilo Tellez: June 15th, 2010

Mobile money services are emerging all over the world and financial regulators are unfamiliar with the money laundering and terrorist financing (ML/TF) risks arising from these new services. The current anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) rules are often applied disproportionately to the risks involved, thus hampering the adoption of mobile money services amongst consumers, the poor in particular. It is, for example, disproportionate to put a high customer due diligence burden on very poor customers who are transacting very low amounts for legitimate reasons. Excessively strict ‘know your customer’ (KYC) rules can be impossible for the poor to comply with, keeping them locked into the informal economy without preventing ML/TF.

MMU Working Group Presentations – Rio de Janeiro

By: Camilo Tellez: June 9th, 2010

The MMU team is pleased to share the proceedings from our last working group held in Rio de Janeiro on May 24th. Please find attached the presentations and descriptions from the various sessions.

GSMA Publish 2010 Mobile Money for the Unbanked Annual Report

By: Camilo Tellez: May 26th, 2010

Today the GSMA is publishing our 2010 Mobile Money for the Unbanked Annual Report. With support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the last year has been a busy one for our programme – and this report catalogues our key pieces of work, including a reference guide on how to build, incentivise and manage an agent network and detailed case studies on Zap, True Money and the Philippines.

GSMA Announces Seven New Grant Recipients from the Mobile Money for the Unbanked Programme

By: Camilo Tellez: May 25th, 2010

The GSMA announced the details of a further seven grantees from the Mobile Money for the Unbanked (MMU) Fund, which is administered by the GSMA Foundation, Inc., with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. New grantees are Cellcard in Cambodia, Digicel in Fiji, Orange in West Africa, Safaricom in Kenya, Tata Indicom in India, Telenor in Pakistan, and Tigo in Africa.

2010 Mobile Money Summit – Day 1: Mobile Money for the Unbanked Working Group

By: Camilo Tellez: May 25th, 2010

Today, the beautiful city of Rio de Janeiro has been the host of the 5th Mobile Money for the Unbanked Working Group. The MMU Programme is at its midpoint and since its inception in February 2009, we have not only built a strong grant portfolio of over 19 projects; but have also witnessed the emergence of approximately 147 mobile money deployments worldwide. In the past twelve months, the MMU programme has set itself a goal – to provide mobile money services to 20 million unbanked consumers by 2012.

Spotlight on Latin America: Colombia

By: Camilo Tellez: April 13th, 2010

In spite of its tumultuous political history, President Alvaro Uribe’s democratic security policy and pro-market reforms have resulted in an enhanced investment climate and burgeoning telecom market. Between 2003 and 2008, Colombia grew as never seen before: on average 5.5 percent of GDP each year, and exceeded Brazil, Chile and Mexico. However, unlike its neighbours who used this period of growth for poverty alleviation, Colombia’s poverty levels remained relatively unaffected and is still suffering from crippling income inequality.

Spotlight on Latin America: The Southern Cone

By: Camilo Tellez: March 12th, 2010

In this second entry to our spotlight on Latin America series we will explore the southern cone. Comprised of Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay, this is a highly diverse group which overall exhibits the highest HDI (Human Development Index) of Latin America, and its relatively high standard of living make it the most prosperous macro-region. That is not to say that mobile money for the unbanked does not have a place in these countries. In Argentina for example, the economic collapse in 2001 left more than half of the population living in poverty and completely eroded the trust in the banking sector.

MMU Deployment Tracker Update

By: Camilo Tellez: March 3rd, 2010

It’s only been two months since the GSMA Mobile Money Deployment Tracker was launched and we are already seeing a noticeable increase in the number of live and planned deployments worldwide. This interactive tool was designed to track the number of mobile money deployments targeting the unbanked segment, as well as present in depth data, remittance corridors, and socio-economic information on the countries in which these deployments are being launched.

So what’s been happening in the last couple months?