Mobile Money Industry Continues to Grow With Services Now Available in 61 Per Cent of Developing Countries Globally
BARCELONA, Spain. - Tuesday, March 3rd 2015 [ME NewsWire]
Mobile World Congress 2015 Mobile World Congress 2015:GSMA
(BUSINESS
WIRE) The GSMA’s Mobile Money for the Unbanked (MMU) programme today
released its fourth annual ‘Mobile Financial Services State of the
Industry Report’, providing a quantitative assessment of the state of
mobile financial services, including mobile money, mobile insurance,
mobile savings and mobile credit. The report draws on the results of the
annual MMU Global Adoption Survey of Mobile Financial Services, as well
as data from the online MMU Deployment Tracker and qualitative insights
on the performance of mobile financial services from the MMU
programme’s engagement with the industry over the last year.
“As
this report demonstrates, mobile financial services have an important
social and economic impact on millions of people in emerging markets
around the world,” said Tom Phillips, Chief Regulatory Officer, GSMA.
“Mobile is a key enabling tool for financial inclusion and over the last
year, we’ve seen significant growth in mobile financial services, not
only in the number of services and geographies served, but also in the
breadth of products that are now available to previously unbanked
individuals. It’s critical that we continue to build on these
foundations to truly drive this industry to scale.”
Growing and Expanding Services
Mobile
money has been growing rapidly over the past few years, and with 255
services in 89 countries, mobile money is now available in 61 per cent
of developing markets1. Mobile network operators (MNOs) have led in the
provision of 149 of these services, demonstrating the important and
growing role they are playing in the development of the mobile money
industry. In Sub-Saharan Africa, the birthplace of mobile money, over 50
per cent of all MNOs have already launched a mobile money service and
by December 2014, 23 per cent of all mobile connections there were
linked with a mobile money account.
Mobile money continues to
transform the way people access financial services: in three-quarters of
the markets where mobile money is available, agent outlets outnumber
bank branches and in 25 markets, there are more than ten times as many
mobile money agents as bank branches. The report shows that the number
of active mobile money users continues to grow rapidly year-on-year,
with more than 100 million accounts active as of December 2014, compared
to 73 million in December 2013, an increase of 41 per cent. Half of all
new mobile money launches took place outside of the Sub-Saharan Africa
region; for instance, in Latin America and the Caribbean, the number of
active accounts increased by 50 per cent over the year, demonstrating
the significant traction that mobile money is gaining globally.
Increase in Interoperable Mobile Money Services
As
mobile money becomes a core service offering for MNOs, increased
competition and customer demand has led to greater interest in the
development of account-to-account interoperability. In 2014, operators
in Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Tanzania interconnected their services to
allow their customers to send money directly to mobile wallets on other
networks, following in the footsteps of operators in Indonesia, where
interoperability was implemented in 2013. Operators in other markets
have also committed to interconnect their services, paving the way for
the creation of a ubiquitous digital services ecosystem.
Enterprises Benefiting From Ecosystem Development
Throughout
2014, transaction volumes have dramatically increased across a range of
mobile money offerings, involving a wider ecosystem of institutional
and business users including merchant payments, bulk disbursements (such
as employee salary payments and delivery of government social
transfers) and bill payments. In December 2014, transactions involving
external companies using mobile money as a platform to receive and make
payments drove the growth in mobile money globally, representing 24 per
cent of the total value of all transactions processed in that month.
Mobile
money providers are continuing to invest in improving and expanding
their services, particularly through the development of the ecosystem
such as acquiring additional merchants, working with institutional
clients and with governments planning to use mobile money to make and
accept mobile money payments. Over 80 per cent of respondents indicated
that they had maintained or increased investment in 2014 over the
previous year. Providers are strengthening their internal capabilities
to address an increasing number of users and transactions through
platform migrations and the extension of application programming
interfaces to third-party users.
Expanding Mobile Money Services and Financial Inclusion
Providers
are expanding into new business areas for mobile financial services,
enhancing their mobile money proposition through provision of products
such as mobile insurance, mobile savings and mobile credit. As of
December 2014, there were 100 live mobile insurance services in 30
countries around the world, accounting for 17 million policies with
unbanked customers.
Mobile financial services such as these play
an increasingly critical role in developing countries, helping to
provide access to credit for many first-time formal borrowers and
reducing the costs of administering low-value policies, which have
proven uneconomical for many traditional providers. For example, in
Bangladesh, the country’s two leading operators have served nearly 9
million customers with mobile life insurance, demonstrating the huge
potential for mobile to reach those who are most vulnerable to financial
shocks.
Supporting Investment for the Long Term
Despite
its significant growth over recent years, the mobile financial services
industry continues to face challenges that will need to be addressed in
order to ensure the continued provision of mobile financial services to
unbanked and underserved users. Regulatory barriers, low levels of
investment and the need for greater industry collaboration limit the
ability for mobile money to reach scale. The GSMA is working with
industry partners by facilitating and supporting collaboration among
member companies as well as with banks and other external parties to
evolve the sector to a new phase of maturity.
Phillips added,
“Mobile network operators are making critical investments in systems,
technology and platforms for mobile money services and as a result, the
industry is starting to experience sustainable revenue growth. However,
it is important to recognise that mobile money requires long-term,
patient investment as the majority of mobile money services are still
waiting to break even as they invest in the foundations of these
life-enhancing services.”
Notes to Editors
A full copy of the report can be found at: http://www.gsma.com/mobilefordevelopment/state-of-the-industry-2014.
More
information on the MMU project can be found at:
http://www.gsma.com/mobilefordevelopment/programmes/mobile-money-for-the-unbanked/about
184 of 139 developing markets, based on the World Bank list of developing countries.
About the GSMA
The
GSMA represents the interests of mobile operators worldwide, uniting
nearly 800 operators with more than 250 companies in the broader mobile
ecosystem, including handset and device makers, software companies,
equipment providers and Internet companies, as well as organisations in
adjacent industry sectors. The GSMA also produces industry-leading
events such as Mobile World Congress, Mobile World Congress Shanghai and
the Mobile 360 Series conferences.
For more information, please visit the GSMA corporate website at www.gsma.com. Follow the GSMA on Twitter: @GSMA.
Contacts
For the GSMA
Charlie Meredith-Hardy, +44 7917 298428
CMeredith-Hardy@webershandwick.com
GSMA Press Office
pressoffice@gsma.com
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