Tag: mobile technologies

Mobile payments brings banking services to the unbanked of the world

Customers that have never had access to financial institutions are using smartphones to change their capabilities.

Many of the countries in Africa have been extremely underserved by banks for a range of different reasons, but mobile payments are now bringing financial services to customers who have always been unbanked.

This is especially true in Nigeria, where mobile money is becoming an important driver in the local economy.

The Central Bank of Nigeria has launched a massive initiative to boost the use and access of mobile payments and money. Among the reasons that this is an important effort is that it will provide them with a tremendously larger market as it will mean that those who were underbanked or completely unbanked will suddenly be able to access financial services by way of their mobile devices.

With mobile payments and banking, location no longer presents a barrier to being able to reach consumers.

This access to mobile banking is bringing individuals who had been far removed from participation in much of mainstream commerce into the ability to take part in widespread economic transactions. Therefore, this means that consumers that had previously been outside of the center of commerce will be accessible to industries beyond simple payments and into pensions, insurance, and other areas.

Mobile Banking - AfricaNone of those industries had been able to establish physical locations that would allow them to be able to sell to consumers in the traditional way, but by using mobile commerce and accepting transactions over smartphones, this has changed the game, entirely.

As the growth in telecom and smartphone and mobile technologies continues to grow and expand, and as the financial services industry increasingly rises to the challenge of offering mobile payments and banking services, the situation has altered across entire African countries. People who live in rural communities that are nowhere near phone lines and cables are gaining access to banking and transactions through financial institutions and telecoms such as UBA and Airtel, MTN and Diamond Bank, First Bank, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Ecobank and Globacom.

Similarly, M-PESA has been making a tremendous splash in reaching the unbanked and rural Kenya, where the mobile money system has taken off extensively, with 17 million users (one third of the adult population of the country) and 40,000 agents. Every day, that service processes over 2 million transactions.

New Yorkers may soon use mobile payments for parking tickets

The Department of Finance for the city is looking to take advantage of the ubiquity of smartphones.

The Department of Finance of New York City is now seeking to develop a mobile payments option to help to boost collections on the tickets that are issued for traffic camera and parking violations.

This could prove to be a large and successful venture, considering that enforcement agents issue 8-10 million tickets per year.

The Department of Finance (DOF) is exploring options for mobile payments for tickets for parking and traffic light violations that would give drivers the ability to use anything from debit and credit cards to Apple Pay, PayPal, or even Bitcoin based transactions. This effort is in response to a request made by the city to obtain information for the development of a system that would accelerate the process of collecting from parking tickets, which brings in approximately $600 million per year.

Using mobile payments was one of the technology channels that appears the most promising to the DOF.

Mobile Payments - Parking TicketThe brief from the department explained that “After an internal review of DOF’s current payment channels and of recent developments in contemporary payment technologies.” It also went on to say that the department feels that emerging tech could offer a way for drivers to quickly and conveniently pay their parking tickets by way of smartphone, tablet, or other forms of mobile devices.

At the moment, the parking tickets that are issued by traffic enforcement agents and NYPD officers can be processed online, through the mail, or in person. The NYC.gov online payment site is not currently mobile optimized, and using it comes with a convenience fee of 2.49 percent.

The proposal from the Department of Finance would develop a mobile payments based system that would provide a single click option. Using that tech, the tickets could be scanned or photographed in a way to be able to process it while also taking “advantage of new technologies and extended public access to government.” It will simply make it easier and faster for the recipients of these tickets to get paying them over with.