Financial technology key to sustained economic growth for Kenya
Most African
countries have a positive economic outlook, largely due to the positive
performance of traditional sectors. This is according to the Institute of
Chartered in England and Wales (ICAEW) latest report, Economic Insight: Africa Q1 2019. The accountancy body provides GDP growth forecasts for
various regions including East Africa which is set to grow by 6.3%, West and
Central Africa at 4.4%, Franc Zone at 4.9%, and Southern Africa at 1.5%. The
report, commissioned by ICAEW and produced by partner and forecaster Oxford
Economics, underscores the potential of fintech in leapfrogging other
traditional economic drivers.
It continues to state that East Africa’s growth has been
reinforced by the development of Kenya’s Financial Technology (FinTech) scene, providing
fintech an opportunity to leapfrog other traditional drivers such as
agriculture which has recently been affected by the delayed onset of the long
rains season in Kenya.
1: Mobile money as a percentage of GDP
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The report goes on to highlight how the development
and proliferation of new innovations in mobile technology have allowed Kenya to
increase financial penetration beyond what would have traditionally been
possible at this stage of the country’s development. The Kenyan Information
Technology sector as a whole now accounts for 5% of the GDP and this is further
reinforced by the presence of global tech firms Google, Microsoft, IBM and
Samsung. “Widespread mobile money usage has helped to smooth consumption,
reduce poverty and boost economic growth in Kenya,” said Mr. Armstrong.
Mobile money accounts for neighbours have risen to
nearly 1,250 per 1,000 adults in Rwanda
and just over 1,000 per 1,000 adults in Uganda.
Other countries seeing a similar proliferation of mobile money accounts include
Ivory Coast (1,700 accounts per
1,000 adults) and Ghana (1,350
accounts per 1,000 adults).
Kenya’s leadership in mobile money is attributed to
the growth of M-Pesa which has institutionalised mobile banking in the country;
the value of mobile commerce transactions reached KShs 1.5trn (around $ 14.9bn)
in Q3 of 2018, while person-to-person transfers amounted to KShs 718bn ($7.1bn)
during the quarter.
The number of active mobile money
transfer agents and subscriptions stood at 218,495 and 29.7 million by the end
of September last year respectively. This implies that 64 out of 100
inhabitants had access to and used mobile money transfer services during Q3
2018. Some estimates suggest that M-Pesa accounts for over two-thirds of total
national payments throughput in terms of volume.
In terms of East Africa’s economic performance, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Uganda are
all expected to record a real GDP growth of 6%. Infrastructure investment and
the expansion of financial services and telecoms services continue to support
growth in these countries.
The full Economic Insight: Africa report can be found here:
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