Mobile Telephony in Kenya … is it “Making life better”?
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Transcript of Mobile Telephony in Kenya … is it “Making life better”?
Mobile Telephony in Kenya… is it “Making life better”?
Luca ManicaMichele Vescovi
ICT4SD course – May 2008
Outline
• Introduction
• ICT and Development Countries
• Mobile Telephony in Kenya
• M-PESA system
• Conclusions
Why this Topic?
UNPD Human DevelopmentReport 2001
• direct linksTechnology ↔ Social Development
Economic Growth• Quantifies the growth of the GNP • No information about how the GNP is distributed • No dependence from Social Development?
NO Economic Growth NO Resources for Education, Health, ect.BUT
Economic Growth does not implies Social Development
BUT ICT are not a magic WAND!
ICT can give opportunities of Social Development:• better life conditions• new jobs• new opportunities of business• more information
New Technologies BE OPTIMISTIC!
The ICT Role
The Morana’s Mobile PhoneImpact of the new technologies on the Kenyan culture
Economic Impact
Cultural Impact
Poverty
Be like a White
• shame• look rich!
• lost of traditions• political choices
ICT make Mistakes
Kenya
• 36 million: estimated population (Dec 2006)
• 65% live in rural areas
• more than 50% below the poverty line (1$/day or less)
• 75% arid / semi-arid land(inhabited mainly by pastoralist communities)
Mobile Telephony
• 70 - 80% population covered (March 2007)
• Mobile penetration: ~ 30% = 11milion Kenyans• 98% prepaid traffic (per second billing)
• 20% geographical area covered(March 2007)
• Coverage is still growing …
Mobile Operators
• Safaricom (1996)
– ~ 9 milion subscribers– 40% Vodafone (U.K.)
• Celtel (2000)
– ~ 2 milion subscribers– 80% Celtel Int. (Kwait)
• Econet Wireless ?– South African company– In legal battles since 2003– Will it roll out within 2008 ? – Third licenced operator
“The better option”
“Making life better”
“? ? ?”
Third operator ?
“Coverage” by Province
# Safaricom’s Base Stations
Coverage by Operator
What is covered ?
1. Popul. / Business2. Tourism3. Main roads / links4. …
? Development of remote / crisis areas
Safaricom Celtel
Mobile Network vs Fixed-line
PERIOD 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07
Wireline Connections 328,358 299,255 278,867 293,364 263,122
Urban Connections 309,070 284,264 264,509 279,079 251,924
Rural Connections 19,288 14,961 14,358 14,285 11,198
Waiters 111,867 109,758 93,192 64,618 26,925 Fix
ed
-lin
e
Traffic to Mobile Networks (minutes) 230,000,000 209,944,354 163,324,095 150,000,000 124,378,826
PERIOD 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07
Capacity 2,000,000 3,935,000 6,800,000 10,600,000 18,200,000
Connections 1,590,286 2,546,157 4,611,970 6,484,791 9,304,818
Mo
bile
N
etw
ork
SMS - - - 201,445,683 315,557,601
Communication Commission of Kenya (CCK), report 2006/2007
2001:# mobile telephony subscriptionsovertaked # fixed telephony subscriptions
Mobile market lacks
• Actually a duopoly Safaricom / Celtel– Difficult to enter in the marked for the 3rd operator– Number portability not yet possible/deployed– Prices are still high: ~0.2€/min, ~0.05€/SMS
• High taxes and duties: – 10% direct on mobile usage– 25% impact estimated on total costs
• Handsets and activation cost still expensive
• Electricity tariffs/availability to recharge batteries– walk for miles and use shops– solar panels, car batteries, generators, … (expensive tech.)– 0.4$ on average to recharge a full cellphone battery
Mobile banking
• Mobile banking… a development opportunity?
• 80% people unbanked in least developed countries (also in Kenya)– Barriers to banking services are:
illiteracy, lack of education, high fees, proximity to bank facilties– Be unbanked means:
cash economy, vulnerability to risks, hard save or borrow money
• Need of transfer money: – bread-winner far from family, run a business, avoid risky travels
• Popular way to transfer money in Kenya: – send it with a relative or friend (risky, slow, …) – use postal services (expensive commissions charged in %)
• Even more adults own (or have access to) a mobile phone, also in rural areas
M-PESA (intro)• World’s first (2007) mobile bancking system• Vodafone/Safaricom + U.K. gov. initial support
• Cellphone based platform for simple banking services and cash-transfers
• On the Safaricom’s common SIM menu• SMS-based, (personal) PIN-protected
• Kenya: banking infrastructure not well developed • Kenya: large network of air-time dealers, retailers,
shops, oil pumps… candidate M-PESA agents
• 1600 M-PESA agents, more than 500,000 customers
M-PESA (more details)• Customer:
– M-PESA account distinct w.r.t. personal airtime credit– “Save” up to 50,000 Ksh (~500€)– Deposit and Send up to 35,000 Ksh per time– Free services: registration, deposit cash, buy airtime,
withdraw cash by non M-P user– Charged service: withdraw cash by M-P. user,
send to M-P. user (fixed), send to non M-P. user (variable)– Show balance, change PIN, languages: English or Swahili– Cash operations (deposit, withdraw) need an M-PESA agent
• Low (directly charged) commissions w.r.t. banks (from 30 Ksh up to 400 Ksh)
• All pooled balances held as a unique account (owned by Safaricom) in a Kenyan bank
M-PESA: Pros (4SD)• Reaches many more people w.r.t. Banks
• To tranfer money is secure, faster, cheaper
• Extends in time the availability of banking services (some are still agent dipendent)
• Opportunity of employment, new business, develop.
• Possible solution to the access issue for “unbanked”... helps to securely store incomes
• Easy to use, even by illiterate
• W.r.t. micro-credit it efficiently overcomes many structural / organizative issues
M-PESA: Cons• Further addiction to mobile phones and the operator
• To deposit is free , to withdraw is charged, deposited amount doesn’t accrues interests... :-o (Is it “save money”?)
• Cheap w.r.t. banks... but not so much in general (%50 population lives with less than 1$/day)
• Enlarge the gap for whome cannot afford a cellphone + SIM + fees (Is M-PESA-sharing possible?)
• W.r.t. Micro-credit:– No more face-to-face realtion to m-c agent and the m-c community– M-c agent is a “skilled”-economist, often an advisor for families
and enterpreneurs ...is an M-PESA agent too?– In a development perspective m-c companieas reuse the deposited
cash in local projects, loans for the local community... It is not the case of the M-PESA accounted capitals
M-PESA: Pros (4SV) (for Safaricom/Vodafone)
• New “unmobiled” subscribers attracted by the service
• Affiliation effect for M-PESA customers
• Airtime credit can be easily/transparently bought
• Direct incoming from services commissions
• All pooled accounts accrue interests for Safaricom and can be further invested
• World’ first service, actually limited to Kenya... a good pilot:
– Vodafone plans to extend it to other countries (India, ...) and globally between countries
– It would be the choice for the 500million $ in remittancies sent to Kenya by migrant (earn commissions)
– It would be the choice for the 268billion $ remittancies worldwide (earn commissions)
Conclusions
• No “Right or Wrong” in ICT
• ICT can give opportunities of development
• Systems developed in “western way”
• Does ICT really change the situation?
What can we do?
• Recognize the role of the Information
• Customize the project on the context
• Measure the actions on the needs of the population
• Be optimistic
Thank you!
Questions?