50306 BRIEF Poor People Using Mobile Financial Services: Observations on Customer Usage and Impact from M-PESA Despite growing agreement on the potential of technology to expand access to finance, or branchless banking, there is surprisingly little data publicly available about low-income users. This Brief draws on some of the first ethnographic research on M-PESA, one of the earliest success stories in mobile phone-based delivery of financial services. The research offers insights into how poor people use M-PESA, its impact on their lives, and some unexpected consequences. M-PESA is a mobile phone-based service for money trail was thereafter followed to a second sending and storing money offered by Safaricom, site, a farming village in western Kenya called Kenya's largest mobile service provider. Safaricom Bukura. A segment of the urban migrants has rural customers can register for M-PESA by visiting one homes in Bukura or surrounding villages. of more than 10,000 merchants who act as "agents" for account opening, handling of deposits and More than 350 people were interviewed, and 21 withdrawals into the customer's virtual "wallet," focus groups were organized during the fieldwork. and customer support. Customers can then use an Fourteen financial diaries were distributed, mostly application on their mobile phone to check their to frequent M-PESA users who recorded their daily balance, send money to other people, pay bills, financial transactions over one month in November and purchase mobile phone airtime. Customer and December 2008. These diaries provide insights funds are held in a special trust account at the into how M-PESA fits into and altered the financial Commercial Bank of Africa. practices of poor Kenyans. Since its commercial launch in March 2007, M-PESA has achieved substantial scale along several key Observations on Usage metrics. Nearly 7 million customers have registered with the service. An average of 150 million Ksh 1. There are two types of users: urban senders, (US$1.96 million) is transferred through M-PESA who are mostly men, and rural recipients, who per day, mostly in small amounts averaging just are mostly women. over 1,500 Ksh (US$20) per transaction. So far, the system has handled over 130 billion Ksh (US$1.7 In Kibera, a majority of customers are young billion). men. Customers deposit money into M-PESA and transfer money to their rural relatives. In Bukura, This Brief presents 10 observations on how poor a majority of customers are women and retirees. people use M-PESA and how it has impacted their They use M-PESA to withdraw money sent to lives. These observations are based on a 14-month them by relatives in the city. Most transfers fall ethnographic study that concluded in November into two categories: (i) recurrent transfers that 2008 and that was conducted in two communities: function as income support for the recipient and Kibera and Bukura. (ii) transfers used to address lump sum needs, such as the purchase of farm inputs. Recurrent transfers Kibera is an informal settlement (a slum) on the are more frequent (once per month or more) and outskirts of Nairobi. More than 1 million people smaller in value than lump sum transfers. The most live in Kibera. They are mostly migrants from rural common reason for a lump sum transfer is to pay villages who came to the city to find work. The school fees. August 2009 2 2. Urban users adopted M-PESA because it is In Bukura, the most common complaint is related cheaper, easier to access, and safer than other to the cash float of agents. The M-PESA system money transfer options. Urban users usually depends on banks for its liquidity. To process persuade rural recipients to also register with withdrawals, agents have to maintain their cash float the service. by making regular trips to the bank. These trips are often costly and time consuming for rural agents Most interviewees in Kibera say they chose M-PESA because most banks are located in urban centers. because of cost. For example, sending 1,000 Ksh Some agents minimize their costs by stocking up on (US$13.06) through M-PESA cost US$0.39, which is cash less frequently. This constrains the efficiency 27 percent cheaper than the post office's PostaPay of M-PESA and forces some customers to travel to (US$0.52), and 68 percent cheaper than sending it cities to make withdrawals. via a bus company (US$1.16).1 Urban users say they prefer M-PESA because it is faster (the transfer 4. M-PESA flows reversed during Kenya's post- occurs almost instantaneously), easier to access election crisis, with rural users sending money (there is a wide agent network), and safer (they and airtime to urban contacts. don't have to travel with money). Money transfers typically flow from urban centers In Bukura, a majority of interviewees say their to rural areas in Kenya. However, flows were relatives in urban areas asked them to sign up and reversed during the country's 2008 post-election use M-PESA. The price structure is designed so that crises. During this period, money and airtime cards it is cheaper to send money to a registered user. could not be physically transported across the For example, it costs 30 Ksh (US$0.39) to transfer country. Many of the roads were blocked by rioting 1,000 Ksh (US$ 13.04) if the user is registered. youth, and the railway was dismantled. Many urban The recipient pays 25 Ksh (US$ 0.33) to make migrants needed money to escape the threat of the withdrawal. If the recipient is not registered, ethnic violence and airtime to communicate about Safaricom charges a higher total fee of 75 Ksh their situation. (US$0.98), which the sender must pay. Some migrants received help from friends and 3. Barriers to usage for urban users include relatives in the village, who transferred both failed transactions and inability to get help from money and airtime via M-PESA. Others withdrew Safaricom. For rural users, barriers include cash cash from M-PESA if they had a balance in their float shortages. account. Most banks remained closed during the crisis, which made it difficult to access money. Because M-PESA uses the same data channel as Some agents in urban areas affected by violence text messages, it often becomes congested at confirm that demand for services was high during peak texting times. As a result, some transactions this period and that urban customers were making fail. These transactions either are not processed withdrawals rather than deposits. in the system, or they are processed but the confirmation SMS is not sent. This is a common 5. M-PESA is used as a storage mechanism by source of customer dissatisfaction in Kibera. When both the banked and unbanked. this happens, the agent calls Safaricom's customer support for the customer. However, because of Although person-to-person transfers dominate the high volume of calls, it can take agents several M-PESA use, urban customers also use M-PESA to hours to get through. This sometimes makes failed store money. Nearly a third of banked customers transactions difficult to resolve. in Kibera keep a balance in their M-PESA account. 1 US$1 = 76.6 Ksh as of July 17, 2009. www.xe.com 3 They say they prefer M-PESA because it is easily This is confirmed in the financial diaries. The diaries accessible. There are no banks within the informal reveal that there was an average of five remittance settlement, but there are more than 40 M-PESA transfers from November through December 2008. agents. This means that M-PESA customers The average value of these transfers was just over do not need to travel outside Kibera to access 1,000 Ksh. Before adopting M-PESA, most users their cash. Note that money stored in M-PESA sent money home once a month or once every and a bank have different purposes. Most use two months. Users explained that they made M-PESA for daily consumption. Some also use it more frequent transfers because M-PESA is cheap to accumulate "small money" into a lump sum. In and easily accessible. Money can be sent from this case, "small money" refers to deposits ranging anywhere, and at anytime, as long as a balance from 100 Ksh (US$1.30) to 1,000 Ksh (US$13.00), is maintained in the account. As one urban user or approximately one week's wages. In some notes, "M-PESA never closes." cases, this money is remitted back to the rural home. In others, it is kept for an "emergency" or 2. The income of rural recipients increased by up unexpected event such as a funeral. Customers use to 30 percent since they started using M-PESA. their bank account mostly for long-term savings. Because M-PESA is not designed as a savings Seventy respondents were asked whether mechanism, no interest is gained on the money household income had changed since they adopted stored. This discourages many banked users from M-PESA. Fifty-four rural respondents (77 percent) keeping larger amounts of money in M-PESA. note an income increase since adopting M-PESA. For 38 respondents, this increase is 5­30 percent A fifth of the unbanked interviewees in Kibera of household income. Such an increase is the result use M-PESA as a substitute for informal methods of money being sent more frequently. By breaking of savings, especially keeping money at home. up their transfers, urban migrants end up remitting Most say they prefer to store money with M-PESA more money back home. Also, rural recipients save because it is safer. They do not need to worry money when retrieving cash. They no longer need about household members finding, and stealing, to pay for transport costs to urban centers, where their money. Many of the unbanked further note most of the money transfer services are located. that they keep money in M-PESA because they Instead, they make the withdrawal directly from trust Safaricom, whereas they feel that money Bukura. Such an increase is vitally important for the stored in a bank is at a high risk of being lost. rural recipients, who depend heavily on remittances Not surprisingly, those who use M-PESA for daily for their livelihoods. The financial diaries reveal consumption usually store less than those who that such remittances constitute as much as 70 use it to accumulate "small money." In contrast percent of rural household income. to users in Kibera, rural customers rarely use the application to store money. Most are concerned 3. M-PESA empowers rural women by making that money would be difficult to access because of it easier for them to solicit funds from their recurring cash float shortages at M-PESA agents. husbands and other contacts in the city. The mobile phone, in conjunction with M-PESA, is Observations on Impact a powerful tool for mobilizing remittances. Before these technologies were introduced, rural women 1. Users began to make smaller, more frequent had to travel to the city or post office by bus to get transfers. money. They then had to travel back to the village. This process could take over a week. Now they can Remittance patterns changed significantly during use a mobile phone to request a remittance and the 14 months of fieldwork. As users became receive it at a nearby agent, making it easier for accustomed to M-PESA, they started remitting rural women to solicit funds from their husbands smaller amounts of money with greater frequency. in the city. It is also easier for them to solicit cash from other contacts when their husbands refuse to frequent users, this high number of deposits August 2009 make the transfers. This has increased the financial cannot be generalized across the user base. This autonomy of the women and has made them less finding, however, reveals the intensity with which dependent on their husbands for their livelihoods. some are using M-PESA. Some made frequent All CGAP publications deposits to accumulate a larger amount of money, are available on the 4. Urban migrants began to make home visits which they then invest in their rural home (e.g., CGAP Web site at less frequently after adopting M-PESA. to purchase a cow). Others put the accumulated www.cgap.org. amount into their bank account to gain some CGAP Before M-PESA, some urban migrants delivered interest on the money stored. 1818 H Street, NW money in person. They preferred this method MSN P3-300 because the money was transferred directly to Washington, DC their relatives. After making the delivery, they Conclusion 20433 USA would spend several days at home with their Tel: 202-473-9594 family. Many explain that, after adopting M-PESA, Rapid adoption and frequent use of M-PESA Fax: 202-522-3744 the frequency of these home visits decreased. engendered a variety of positive outcomes, as Through M-PESA, they send money directly to well as unintended consequences. Specific design Email: their rural relatives, without spending time and elements of the M-PESA system shape these cgap@worldbank.org money on the journey. Less frequent home visits impacts. Most important, by allowing money to © CGAP, 2009 are a concern for rural wives. Many claim that flow electronically rather than physically, M-PESA their husbands will become lonely and find a "city lessens, and in some cases eliminates, many wife" if they visit home less often. They describe of the spatial and temporal barriers to money two possible outcomes: (i) it could result in less transfer. This releases money flows in Kenya or no money sent back home and (ii) it could and allows such flows to penetrate rural areas also result in the co-wife coming from the city where cash is difficult to access. Also, as M-PESA to inhabit the rural land. This finding counters reached a critical mass of users, network effects a popular assumption that is often made about began to develop. Each new M-PESA user has mobile phones--that these technologies amplify the potential to tap into an extensive network of existing relationships. When used as tools for potential remitters and lenders. Many of the rural financial services, these technologies can have residents quickly realized this potential and used the opposite effect. this network to increase their income inflows. 5. Users are integrating M-PESA into their There are also some unexpected consequences savings portfolio. As a result, savings patterns of M-PESA, particularly in savings behavior. are changing. The fact that many customers use M-PESA for savings reveals a latent demand for appropriate The financial diaries reveal that M-PESA is savings products within the two communities being used in conjunction with popular savings studied. It also reveals an important opportunity mechanisms, including having a bank savings for Safaricom. By partnering with financial service account, using informal savings clubs, and providers, mobile operators can play as significant keeping money at home. M-PESA users spread a role in mobilizing savings as they did in releasing out their savings across all of these mechanisms money flows across the country. to decrease the risk of money being "wiped out" if one mechanism fails. When M-PESA became Acknowledgments available, users began to make frequent deposits of "small money" into their M-PESA accounts. This Brief is drawn from the doctoral research of The financial diaries reveal that users make, on Olga Morawczynski, funded by Microsoft Research average, 15 of these deposits per month. Because and the University of Edinburgh. most participants who kept financial diaries are AUTHORS Olga Morawczynski and Mark Pickens