Beating
financial inclusion targets
By
Mnaku Mbani
Tanzania is targeting to increase financial inclusion of
80 per cent of adult population using financial access point by 2017
The
country exceeded the target of 50 per cent by 2016 under the National Financial
Inclusion Framework (NFIF 2014/2017), with 55 per cent financial inclusion in
2014.
According
to the NFIF, the goal was beaten, thanks to the mobile telephony technology
with more than 38 million subscribers, which has extended the adult
population’s financial inclusion to more than 50% with 16 million people using
mobile money accounts.
The
Bank of Tanzania (BOT) also set targeted for the 2015/16 fiscal year aiming at
70% of the population living within five kilometres of a financial access point
by enhancing access and implementing access channels such as agent banking,
further mobile financial services, point-of-sales (POS), and automated teller
machines (ATMs).
The
BOT knew that by allowing the telecom sector to conduct mobile money payment
services would be a good platform to improve financial services, therefore, the
authorities concerned decided to assume a test and learn position that allowed
mobile network operators to develop new services to review the risks later
instead of establishing constraining regulations, explained BOT Governor, Prof.
Benno Ndulu.
This
approach allows the BOT to test new mobile payment services in the market,
observe the kind of risks related with them and regulate to improve bank
services and also help them to expand their reach using mobile platforms, Prof.
Ndulu added.
The
partnership between mobile network operators and financial institutions has
helped Tanzania to position among the leaders in usage and access to affordable
financial services in the world ranking 12th out of 21 developing countries in
the world according to the last Brookings Financial and Digital Inclusion
Project (FDIP).
According
to the World Bank, Tanzania is the second largest country using mobile money
accounts in Sub Saharan Africa (SSA) with approximately 47 per cent of its
adult population and beating Uganda with which it recently shared the second
position.
It is also ranked number 6th globally for providing the most conducive environment for financial inclusion as evaluated by the Intelligence Unit of the Economist through their Global Microscopic Surveys conducted in 2014 and 2015.
It is also ranked number 6th globally for providing the most conducive environment for financial inclusion as evaluated by the Intelligence Unit of the Economist through their Global Microscopic Surveys conducted in 2014 and 2015.
Global Microscopic
surveys show financial inclusion depth in Tanzania has deepened as a broad
spectrum of institutions including banks, businesses, non-bank financial
institutions and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have all made successful
attempts to reach out to and incorporate underserved and excluded members of
the public through non-traditional channels aimed at expanding financial
offerings.
After surpassing
financial inclusion targets of 2014, the Central Bank has set new targets of
achieving usage of formal financial services under the National Financial
Inclusion Framework (NFIF 2014/17) of having 80 per cent of adult population
using a financial access point.
The Monetary
Statement of the first half of the 2015/16 fiscal year also shows that BoT is
targeting to have at least 70 per cent of the population living within five
kilometres of a financial access point by 2017.
Only 12 per cent of
adults have both types of accounts, she said. Mobile money accounts in Tanzania
so far do not disproportionally reach adults traditionally excluded from the
formal financial sector such as the poor men and women.
The data show further
that slightly below 20 per cent of men and women had accounts with financial
institutions. Twenty four per cent of adult males had mobile money account
compared to 17 per cent only for women.
Eleven per cent of the
poorest had accounts in financial institutions compared to 24 per cent of the
richest by 2014, while 13 per cent of the poorest had mobile money accounts
compared to 26 per cent of the richest.
The consultant said
only nine per cent of Tanzanians receive wages and about half of those receive
it directly into their accounts.
In Tanzania 14 per cent of adults pay utility bills and
one third of them make such payments digitally with virtually all of them
making the payments through mobile phones.
end
Maoni
Chapisha Maoni