23 November 2016
Mobile money is driving a price revolution in international remittances
The following is a guest blog posting from one of AFI’s PPD Partners, GSMA. The original version of this post can be found on the GSMA website.
In just a few years, mobile money has evolved from operating as a purely domestic P2P transfer service to enabling transfers between more than 20 countries globally. In a previous blog post, we focused on the customer benefits of sending and receiving international remittances using mobile money and discussed the immense potential of the mobile money industry to drive down cost for customers. To assess the impact of mobile money on reducing the costs of international remittances, the GSMA commissioned an independent data collection exercise, using the World Bank’s methodology [1].
Today, we are publishing key findings from this research, which indicate that mobile money is driving a price revolution in international remittances. Highlights from the research include:
Beyond the reduction of remittance prices, the impact of mobile money supports broader policy objectives, particularly accelerating financial inclusion and strengthening financial integrity. Mobile money can act as a key gateway to financial inclusion, both for remittance senders and recipients, by allowing them to make digital payment transactions rather than simply reverting to cash. It is also a powerful tool to digitise large flows of informal transfers.
Ongoing research is needed to chart the impact of mobile money on remittances and, in turn, on progress toward SDG 10.c. The GSMA therefore encourages the international community to include mobile money as a key component of any policy initiative aimed at reducing the cost of remittances. Bold reforms are also needed to facilitate greater competition and lower prices to expedite the achievement of UN SDG 10.c. Regulators in some countries have acknowledged this and have moved to enable mobile money in the international remittance sector. We urge others to follow this example by supporting an open and level playing field in the international money transfer space, one that allows non-traditional service providers, such as mobile money providers, to compete with traditional remittance services.
The full publication explores these insights in further depth through the data analysis and through examples of different initiatives launched by mobile money providers.
Notes:
[1] GSMA commissioned Developing Markets Associates to provide an independent data collection exercise covering corridors where mobile money can be used to send remittances.
[2] By 2030, reduce to less than 3% the transaction costs of migrant remittances and eliminate remittance corridors with costs higher than 5%, https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/sdg10
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