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M-Pesa lands in South Africa

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South Africa’s largest mobile phone operator Vodacom has teamed up with Nedbank to unveil an M-Pesa mobile-based cash transfer service. The firm hopes to net over 13 million people who remain unbanked in Africa’s most developed nation. Photo/FILE

South Africa’s largest mobile phone operator Vodacom has teamed up with Nedbank to unveil an M-Pesa mobile-based cash transfer service. The firm hopes to net over 13 million people who remain unbanked in Africa’s most developed nation. Photo/FILE 

By JEVANS NYABIAGE jnyabiage@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted  Wednesday, September 1  2010 at  17:55

South Africa’s largest mobile phone operator Vodacom has teamed up with Nedbank to unveil an M-Pesa mobile-based cash transfer service, similar to the successful on operating in Kenya.

The service was developed by Britain’s Vodafone, the majority shareholder in Vodacom, and part owner of Kenya’s Safaricom.

The product - available in Tanzania and Afghanistan - allows users to transfer money from person to person using a mobile phone.

It will initially allow users without access to bank accounts to transfer money using handsets and eventually pay bills and buy goods.

Vodacom plans to replicate M-Pesa’s success in Kenya to the continent’s richest country in a move targeting about 13 million unbanked South Africans.

In Kenya, M-Pesa as a value added service has helped Safaricom to increase its market share from about 60 per cent three years ago to over 80 per cent.

Mr Mark Taylor, the newly appointed MD of Vodacom Payment Services, the company that houses M-Pesa offering hopes to emulate those market share gains in SA.

“There are other cellphone banking products and money transfer services out there, but there quite simply is nothing like M-PESA.

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‘‘The beauty of this service is the ease and speed with which people can send money to each other anywhere in the country,” said Mr Pieter Uys, Vodacom Group CEO in a statement.

Vodacom’s commercial director Romeo Kumalo says the telecom’s target is to sign up 10 million customers within three years.

“If we get to 10 million users, that gives us more than 50 per cent of our subscriber base,” says Mr Taylor. “Then we will start to build enough traction that people will churn to us.”

In Kenya and Tanzania M-Pesa has been extended to allow customers to pay for school fees, insurance premiums and to put money into savings accounts.

“In South Africa, cell phone penetration is extremely high, and yet it is estimated that more than 13 million economically active South Africans do not have a bank account,” said Mr Mike Brown, Nedbanks’ chief executive.

Customers there can also receive payments such as salaries and dividends.

In July alone, about 1.7 million new M-Pesa subscriptions in Kenya were recorded.

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Add a comment (8 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Gabriel1977

    This awesome !!I have seen the adverts and this is a nice internal thing.I send money to South africa all the time with mukuru.com they are so efficient to get the money to South Africa and now that money can be distributed by Mpesa brilliant! you have to love South Africa well done!

    Posted  September 13, 2010 12:00 PM  
  2. Submitted by Gerikaza

    When are they going to bring it to the US. Im tired of driving out and giving all the information to the moneygram/western union

    Posted  September 03, 2010 08:40 PM  
  3. Submitted by Dmmade

    't's good news for Africa as it advances in development under the field of ICT.

    Posted  September 03, 2010 09:57 AM  
  4. Submitted by yesuwangu

    if MPesa is unveiled in NIGERIA That is the end of it

    Posted  September 02, 2010 07:03 PM  
  5. Submitted by KenyanSamenya

    it can land anywhere, but it is still an expensive service compared to other like services! Zap is the way to go

    Posted  September 02, 2010 04:44 PM  

See all 8 comments