Facilitated by a mobile network operator, seasonal workers were able to access their money through a mobile phone SIM card. Mobile payments are helping to increase financial options and decision-making authority for workers, particularly women. With direct access to electronic funds, women now have more control over their money, allowing for independent financial planning, saving, and purchasing as the recipients can use the phones to manage their financial accounts including money deposits, transfers, and cash out.
Before working as a spray operator, Filumba Beauty was working as a volunteer counselor and had no income for her and her three children. Since she started working for the PMI AIRS Project three years ago, she’s been promoted from spray operator to Team Leader. The money she’s earned has enabled her to build a house for her and her three children and is helping to pay for her son’s third year of teaching school. Beauty said, however, that she was having difficulty saving money and getting her son the money when he needed it.
“When you have cash and no bank account, it’s hard to save,” said Beauty. “You just use the money. I would see things and buy them. Now I don’t do that.”
“It’s easy to send my son money with the mobile phone when he needs it,” she added. “And using the phone is much safer.”
Beauty’s son Richard said that the mobile payments have made a huge difference in his life. “School is very stressful. We get bills and we have to pay immediately. Before, we really struggled to do that and the school doesn’t care if you live far away from home and can’t get money right away. It’s so much easier with the mobile phones. My mom seems so much stronger. It’s not as stressful now and I can focus on my tests instead of worrying about the bills.”
This story was taken from www.africairs.net