Ethiopia opens up its mobile cash
Business
By
Reuters
| Apr 03, 2020
Ethiopia’s central bank will allow locally-owned non-financial institutions to start offering mobile money services as it seeks to boost non-cash payments in the country, it said.
The Horn of Africa nation is in the midst of massive economic reforms led by reformist Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, including the privatisation of the State-owned telecommunications monopoly Ethio Telecom.
The new directive would allow Ethio Telecom, as an Ethiopian-owned company, to move into mobile money.
Any foreign-owned companies, however, would remain locked out, according to the new regulations that were published on Wednesday.
Foreign telecom operators, including Safaricom and South Africa’s MTN, have expressed interest in bidding for telecoms licenses in Africa’s second most populous country.
READ MORE
How UAE's Sh130 billion AI initiative could transform African economies
How a grieving Busia couple turned agony into profitable venture
SL-African maritime experts urge safeguards over IMO carbon curbs
Dashboards: How to locate the blind spot
New "air taxis" debut in central China as nation accelerates low-altitude drive
KENHA: Nithi bridge construction to take two years
KenGen eyes direct sales to escape Kenya Power's debt trap
Kenya moves to advance gender equity, climate resilience in construction sector
Murang'a leads counties in jobs, digital services
Time to change Kenya's e-mobility policy from strategic vision to measured transition
But without further changes to the regulations, they will remain unable to offer mobile financial services business, analysts said.
“This directive effectively excludes foreign fin-tech and telecom companies from reaping the business benefits,” Bahakal Abate, a corporate lawyer in Addis Ababa, told Reuters.