Blockchain Will Energise Financial Inclusion
By Francis Lutalo
Access to financial services, has increased in recent years thanks to the eruption of mobile money. Between its introduction in 2011 to date, more than 10 million accounts have been created far outstripping the banking sector’s numbers.
As a result, according to a survey by the Financial Sector Deepening (FSD) financial inclusion in Uganda has risen to 88 percent in 2023 compared to 77 percent in five years ago.
While that is encouraging, it is also true that mobile money currently mostly serves as a conduit for transfer of money, people receive money and cash it out. So while they are now in the formal financial system, they are underbanked or unbanked, not taking advantage of the financial sector services beyond transferring and receiving money.
The reasons for these are many, not least of all that they have no history of trusting a third party with their money. We should not be surprised. For starters not all districts in Uganda have a bank branch, so access to the formal financial sector was limited or none existent for the majority of Ugandans until the advent of mobile money.
Trust in the financial sector is critical to not only greater financial inclusion, but onwards to the maximum exploitation of the benefits of this inclusion and with emerging technologies, the opportunities to leverage are immense.
Blockchain technologies promise a world where the cost of transactions will collapse, financial services will be available to even the most basic phones, all at the speed of light.
Think of blockchain as a distributed ledger, where transactions are recorded in real time and are immutable, unchangeable once all the parties have agreed to the transaction.
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