The Vice President and Flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, has proposed the adoption of mobile money as a common payment system in Africa, in order to address trade barriers and other financial challenges on the African continent.
Addressing African participants at an Interoperability Symposium in Accra on Friday, organised by Africa Prosperity Network (APN), Dr. Bawumia pointed out age-long challenges associated with inter-African trade, such as low rate of trading among Africans, low export rate, difficult and slow payment systems, and pressure on foreign exchange.
To address these, Dr. Bawumia proposed the adoption of a mobile money Interoperability payment system for Africa, which he said would be seamless and boost trade among Africans.
"Trade payments and relationships are currently hampered by inadequate settlement systems, which result in high costs, limited access, slow processing speeds, and a lack of transparency."
Dr. Bawumia further said "Making mobile money interoperable across borders (Africa) would allow our citizens to trade seamlessly," adding that a strong political will is required to make it a reality.
"Without political will, it is not likely to be achieved. It takes a lot of effort to bring stakeholders together on a common platform," he said.
Later on his Facebook page, Dr. Bawumia further wrote how an African mobile money interoperability payment system will virtually make it a common currency for trade in Africa, without necessarily having to meet all the economic requirements.
He referenced Ghana's successful implementation of mobile money interoperability payment system, as a successful case which Africa can learn from.
Below is what Dr. Bawumia wrote:
I was the keynote speaker for the opening session of the Africa Prosperity Network Conference held in Accra today. This session of the conference seeks to explore the partnerships and possibilities of intra-Africa continental mobile money interoperability. The theme underscores Ghana's leading role in ensuring triangular mobile money interoperability that ensures seamless financial transactions across telcos, bank accounts, and e-zwich platforms.
Ghana's successful implementation of a comprehensive mobile money interoperability, which is unique on the continent, will become handy as the rest of Africa strives to pursue a similar course.
For me, having continental mobile money interoperability will ultimately achieve, to a greater extent, the objectives of a common currency without necessarily having a common currency in Africa. We should aim at pursuing this on an incremental basis. This does not require pursuing the elusive macroeconomic convergence criteria by the West African Monetary Zone countries for example but rather the implementation of digital payments convergence criteria. Just a few countries like Ghana, Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire can start and we can proceed incrementally.
Latest Stories
-
‘Stop killing, raping us,’ Ayra Starr demands justice for slain uni student
4 mins -
Man stabs friend to death in Krachi Nchumuru
22 mins -
Police arrest man in Central Region shooting incident
1 hour -
Father, son sentenced for conspiracy, trespass and stealing teak trees
1 hour -
O’Reilly SHS student who stabbed classmate remanded for 2 weeks
1 hour -
Court orders arrest of couple over defrauding landlady of GH¢260K
2 hours -
Former U.S. President George W. Bush does not plan to make election endorsement
2 hours -
Kamala Harris to kick off battleground states tour after debating Trump
2 hours -
Fire breaks out at another Kenyan school after 21 die in inferno
2 hours -
Kendrick Lamar to headline Super Bowl half-time show
3 hours -
A beauty pageant turns ugly: The alleged plot to steal a queen’s crown
3 hours -
Akufo-Addo invites Chinese investors to join Ghana’s economic transformation
3 hours -
China stops short of Africa debt relief as it pledges more cash
3 hours -
Trump and Harris battle for Black voters in Georgia
3 hours -
American Airlines ex-mechanic gets 9 years prison for smuggling cocaine hidden under cockpit
3 hours