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E-cash
system riles Zimbabwe's banks
Kennedy
Maphosa, Mail and Guardian (SA)
June 14, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-06-14-00-e-cash-system-riles-banks
Zimbabwe banks say cellphone
giant EcoCash is stealing their business, adding that it is unregulated.
But what do consumers want?
"I now keep my money
in this thing," said John Marufu, an accountant at a Harare
firm. Poking his cellphone, he continues: "If there is a crisis
at home and there is an urgent need for cash, I send it through
the phone."
"My rural folks
now trust that I can send them the money, even over the weekend,
and they love it. I just need to have the money in the [mobile]
wallet."
Marufu is one of thousands
of Zimbabweans who have embraced EcoCash, the country's mobile money
payment platform. But it has upset bankers, who claim it is unfair
competition and the service, owned by the largest mobile telecommunications
firm, Econet Wireless, is unregulated.
EcoCash, launched in
September 2011, has witnessed phenomenal growth, with its subscriber
base increasing by 62%, from 1.3-million, in the year to February
2013, according to latest Econet financial results.
The agency network supporting
the EcoCash business grew by 242% in the same period, to over 3
000 agents.
The EcoCash services
have included bill payments, bulk payment merchant services and
bank-related facilities but a new service that allows companies
to pay employees' salaries directly into their EcoCash wallets,
a virtual bank account, has upset the banking industry.
"An
opportunity in the financial services sector"
James Myers, Econet's
board chairperson, said the telecommunications group had launched
EcoCash as a response to "an opportunity in the financial services
sector where most of the people in the country did not have access
to bank accounts".
But the Bankers' Association
of Zimbabwe has complained to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and asked
it to curb, or at least regulate, the activities of EcoCash.
The bank's governor,
Gideon Gono, initially ignored the bankers' request but later said
all mobile money transfer companies should now be backed by funds
held in banks.
To get around this, Econet
acquired control of a commercial bank, TN Bank, in which it now
has a 98.6% shareholding. Myers says the acquisition now allows
EcoCash "to be firmly in control of the future growth prospects
of its financial services-related innovations".
But bankers say Econet
is not only using its dominance in telecommunications to sideline
them but is also denying them access to its network to roll out
mobile money services similar to its own.
"Econet has refused
to allow us to use their network as a gateway for our own mobile
money transfer service.
"We want that to
allow bank customers to transact on their bank accounts using their
mobile phones," said a bank executive who did not want to named.
Unstructured
supplementary services data
The gateway is the unstructured
supplementary services data (USSD) that is available on the global
system for mobile communications networks and is required to connect
two or more different networks, including performing protocol conversions.
Bankers say access to
Econet's USSD service would enable their customers to make cellphone-to-cellphone
payments on bank platforms and ZimSwitch.
ZimSwitch is the sole
national electronic funds switch owned by a consortium of banks
used to process domestic card-based ATM and point-of-sale transactions
among member financial institutions in real time.
Econet is creating what
appears to be a rival platform to that offered by ZimSwitch and
is courting banks to join the EcoCash platform.
Myers said some banks
and EcoCash were already integrated, with new features such as the
bank-to-wallet functionality that allows customers to transfer money
from their bank accounts to their Econet mobile wallet.
EcoCash has also launched
EcoCash debit cards, which allows payments to retailers from the
mobile wallet.
Integration
So far, only four banks
have been integrated with EcoCash - CBZ Bank, Agribank, Stanbic
Bank and TN Bank. Those that have shunned it include Barclays Bank
(Zimbabwe), FBC Bank, Kingdom Bank, ABC Bank, MBCA Bank and the
building society CABS. They insist Econet should give them full
access to its gateway.
A disgruntled bank chief
executive, who did not want to be named and whose bank has not been
integrated with EcoCash, said Econet allowed banks only limited
access to its network for a few services such as airtime top up,
the payment of Econet bills, balance inquiries, real-time gross
settlements and mini bank statements.
Econet denies that it
has refused to give banks access to its gateway, describing the
allegation as "simply not true".
Darlington Mandivenga,
an Econet executive responsible for the rollout of EcoCash, said:
"We have agreements with most of the banks, and we are currently
carrying out physical connections with most of them. Econet initiated
the process but it cannot be rushed because it involves accessing
bank accounts."
Another banker said the
other network operators, the state-owned NetOne and Telecel Zimbabwe,
had already connected banks that wished to use their USSD service
for a fee. "We want the same thing with Econet," he said,
and complained that the reach by the other two networks was limited.
NetOne and Telecel have
slightly fewer than five million subscribers between them and access
in rural areas is poor. Econet has over eight million subscribers
and an extensive network coverage.
Telecel has said that
it will launch its own mobile banking services soon.
NetOne's OneWallet has
been unable to draw a respectable following, despite launching before
EcoCash.
The bankers' association
chief executive, Sijabuliso Biyam, would not disclose how far the
Econet issue had been taken.
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