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10 sats \ 5 replies \ @KenyaCoin 17 Mar 2022 \ parent \ on: ‘We don’t like our money’: The story of the CFA and Bitcoin in Africa bitcoin
They keep using that word "credit". I don't think it means what they think it means!
To begin with, m-Pesa emerged fifteen years ago after Safaricom, the leading mobile telecom provider in Kenya, noticed that mobile subscribers were transferring their airtime credit (i.e., credit for voice minutes and texting) as a way of transferring value person-to-person. But m-Pesa service is (and always was) for fiat currency (i.e., Kenyan shillings). There's no "airtime credit" transferred using m-Pesa. It's for transferring from your KSh. Actually, thinking about that -- there is, like a short-term loan service, where using the m-Pesa service you can borrow some funds, and when those KSh are added to your m-Pesa balance those fiat funds can be transferred. But you aren't paying with credit (like you might with, say, a "credit card").
Now there are other mobile money networks (over a hundred and fifty, or so, significant ones), ... but they all work in this manner, where it is fiat from subscriber/account-holder balances that are transferred.
Though there is (at least) one exception -- Grass Roots Economics' Sarafu mobile money, which is a Community Inclusion Currency (CIC). But CICs are more social experiments where concepts like basic income, demurrage, and closed loop / circular economy approaches are tested, and they are not mobile money networks, per-se. At least not at their current levels of traction.
As much as 46% of the Subsaharan population in Africa has a smartphone and, as evidenced, mobile money is booming.
With somewhere around half the population being under 20, that number of smartphone owners might seem a little high. Maybe it was 46% of adult population? Still seems high,... and having learned to not take even a single thing from CoinTelegraph as accurate, without verifying, let's do some verifying!
[/me spends about 30 seconds doing a Google search ....]
Oh ... 46% have a mobile phone subscription. But many (if not most) of those devices are going to be "feature phones", not "smartphones"
By the end of 2020, 495 million people subscribed to mobile services in Sub-Saharan Africa, representing 46% of the region’s population – an increase of almost 20 million on 2019. With more than 40% of the region’s population under the age of 15, young consumers owning a mobile phone for the first time will remain the primary source of growth for the foreseeable future.
After doing another 30 seconds of Googling found:
About 50% of the subscribers are using smartphone devices, per the chart on page 7 of this report:
So, the author of this CoinTelegraph is only off by about 50%.
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For Idrissa Seck, a Bitcoin enthusiast and bank payment agent, understanding money is the key to unlocking an understanding of Bitcoin.
That could be the real name of that Bitcoin enthusiast there in Senegal, ... just like Bill Clinton could be the real name of a Bitcoin enthusiast in America. More likely though is that the Bitcoin enthusiast provided the author of the article the name of a former Prime Minister of the country instead of his own name when asked.
Only pain is the likely result if you dox yourself to a journalist!
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