Fintech to contribute $150bn to Africa’s GDP by 2022

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The contribution of the financial-technology industry to sub-Saharan Africa’s economic output will increase by at least $40 billion to $150 billion by 2022, according to Financial Sector Deepening Africa, a development-finance organization.

The industry currently employs about three million people directly and indirectly in the region, FSD Africa Financial Markets Director Evans Osano quoted as having said in an interview on Thursday.

According to data compiled by the International Monetary Fund, Sub-Saharan Africa’s gross domestic product (GDP) is about $1.6 trillion.

“If you look at the value chain, most of that money is coming out of mobile-phone companies,” Osano said. “So from the other support services the contribution is not much, but is expected to increase as fintech develops to address the financial needs of people or making services more accessible.”

Safaricom Plc, East Africa’s biggest mobile-network operator, developed one of the world’s first mobile phone-based money transfer services, and says 88 percent of its almost 30 million customers now use it. About 21 per cent of adults in sub-Saharan Africa have a mobile-money account, nearly twice the share in 2014 and the highest of any region in the world, according to the World Bank’s Global Findex Data.

FSD Africa is working with some lenders, insurers and fintech companies in several countries including Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania, Malawi, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Sierra Leone and Zambia to increase the use of data analytics, FSD Africa Financial Institutions Director Paul Musoke said in the same interview.

“What we’re focusing on is data, availability of data and how institutions can take on this data and utilise it to gain better insight of their customers and product development,” he said.

FSD is working with companies that are developing technology to collect premiums from the diaspora and to enable insurers in various African nations to cover death and medical-related expenses, Musoke said. It is also looking into using technology to collect funds among Africans in the diaspora to invest in building homes.

It is still too early for African governments to start taxing start-up companies in the fintech industry and regulations should encourage innovation rather than try control the sector, he advised.

“From a regulatory point of view it is about protecting the consumers who use these apps, that is where the real concern is,” Musoke said.

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