MasterCard Inc has assessed
African countries as sharing some of the world’s highest speeds of digital
growth with people now constantly in pursuit of faster and more convenient ways
of paying for goods and services, noting that with the advances in technology,
it is now possible to satisfy this demand at reasonable costs.
Speaking at the just
concluded 16th edition of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Cash-less Card Expo
held in Lagos on ‘Retail payment in the emerging eCommerce Revolution in
Africa’, Vice President and Area Business Head West Africa, MasterCard,
Omokehinde Adebanjo, said that whilst the progress has been slow, electronic
payment systems are superseding cash, bank notes, payment orders and cheques with
a huge demand for faster and more convenient ways to pay for goods and
services.
“In Africa, financial
inclusion is crucial in order to ensure sustained economic progress and
electronic payment growth across the region and other emerging markets, considering
that several areas in the continent still do not have banking systems, whilst
those that do are slowly transitioning from a cash-based society to electronic
payment methods,” she said.
Financial exclusion is a
major challenge with almost two thirds of the African population falling
outside of the financial mainstream. In order to address this challenge,
analysts have observed that it has become more important than ever to make
financial services more easily available to the millions of low-income, undeserved
and unbanked individuals.
She stressed that
financially excluded markets are huge unserved populations looking for a
solution, and lower income does not mean that electronic payments are out of
reach.
According to MasterCard,
many successful initiatives targeting lower-income segments have been
established, such as micro payments and micro finance, adding that these types
of services have the potential to open up new remittance corridors, expand the
scope of cashless money transfers, extend financial inclusion and grow the
economy. Through the use of technology, households, local business and
technology companies become empowered to create a world beyond cash.
The firm also observed that
the e-commerce environment in Africa is robust and expanding at a rapid rate,
which is driven by continued telecommunications infrastructural development, an
increase in the number of mobile service providers and the decreasing costs of
using the Internet.
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