In an interview with the Standard newspaper, Michael Joseph, the founding CEO of Safaricom, has aired his disappointment at MPESA’s growing dependence on lending products.
Joseph, who refers to himself as the ‘Mother of M-PESA,’ says no one at the company could have predicted the success that M-PESA has achieved when it was started in 2007.
However, despite the success, the current Safaricom board chairman does not like the trajectory the mobile money product has taken in the last ten years, with its lending products.
Borrowing through M-PESA, he says, is ‘too expensive’ for the customers.
“When I introduced M-Shwari, the plan was that it was going to be a savings and borrowing product. So first, you save and get the habit of saving. Then after saving, you borrow money based on your savings.”
– Michael Joseph, Former CEO, Safaricom
As it is, the CEO believes that people use the platform to borrow more than they save, which is contrary to how it was intended.
Since 2012, when Safaricom introduced M-SHWARI loan products in tandem with CBA bank, the firm now has 3 of them:
M-SHWARI underwritten by CBA
KCB M-PESA underwritten by KCB
Fuliza
While Safaricom does not break down the contribution of the loan products to its service revenue, M-PESA’s share of the revenue has continued to rise in the last few years, with the product reportedly earning 45% of the telcos revenue.
In 2019, the two banks underwriting M-SHWARI and KCB M-PESA came together with Safaricom to launch a different kind of lending service, an overdraft service. Dubbed Fuliza, this lends micro-loans to consumers to enable them complete transactions when they are short of funds.
Fuliza has grown popular quickly, coinciding with the COVID-19 pandemic, with borrowings hitting $5 billion in 2021. This translated to $13.7 million borrowed via Fuliza daily in 2021.
Fuliza’s success has become so much so that users are less interested in the original loan products, M-SHWARI and KCB M-PESA.
Trang này có thể chứa nội dung của bên thứ ba, được cung cấp chỉ nhằm mục đích thông tin (không phải là tuyên bố/bảo đảm) và không được coi là sự chứng thực cho quan điểm của Gate hoặc là lời khuyên về tài chính hoặc chuyên môn. Xem Tuyên bố từ chối trách nhiệm để biết chi tiết.
M-PESA Founder On Loans: This is Not What I Wanted
In an interview with the Standard newspaper, Michael Joseph, the founding CEO of Safaricom, has aired his disappointment at MPESA’s growing dependence on lending products.
Joseph, who refers to himself as the ‘Mother of M-PESA,’ says no one at the company could have predicted the success that M-PESA has achieved when it was started in 2007.
However, despite the success, the current Safaricom board chairman does not like the trajectory the mobile money product has taken in the last ten years, with its lending products.
SEE ALSO: We are Transitioning to Become a Digital Financial Services Provider, Says CEO, Safaricom (M-PESA)
______________________________________________________________________
Borrowing through M-PESA, he says, is ‘too expensive’ for the customers.
“When I introduced M-Shwari, the plan was that it was going to be a savings and borrowing product. So first, you save and get the habit of saving. Then after saving, you borrow money based on your savings.”
– Michael Joseph, Former CEO, Safaricom
As it is, the CEO believes that people use the platform to borrow more than they save, which is contrary to how it was intended.
Since 2012, when Safaricom introduced M-SHWARI loan products in tandem with CBA bank, the firm now has 3 of them:
While Safaricom does not break down the contribution of the loan products to its service revenue, M-PESA’s share of the revenue has continued to rise in the last few years, with the product reportedly earning 45% of the telcos revenue.
In 2019, the two banks underwriting M-SHWARI and KCB M-PESA came together with Safaricom to launch a different kind of lending service, an overdraft service. Dubbed Fuliza, this lends micro-loans to consumers to enable them complete transactions when they are short of funds.
Fuliza has grown popular quickly, coinciding with the COVID-19 pandemic, with borrowings hitting $5 billion in 2021. This translated to $13.7 million borrowed via Fuliza daily in 2021.
Fuliza’s success has become so much so that users are less interested in the original loan products, M-SHWARI and KCB M-PESA.
___________________________________________________________________
RECOMMENDED READING: EXPLAINER: How the Massively Successful Safaricom M-PESA Agency Network is Driving Digital Banks in Kenya to Go Physical
___________________________________________________________________
Thank you for your support by helping us create content:
Donate BTC address*: 3CW75kjLYu7WpELdaqTv722vbobUswVtxT*
ERC20 Address: 0x03139524428e40E31f13909f8D994C915FB91277
SOL address: 9cC65AWFHj848kntcoyiT8av3jiRQEqyTTmBR1GvVUb
____________________________________________________________________
_____________________
Subscribe to our YouTube channel below for more updates:
_____________________________________________________________