Post offices in Africa now deliver more
money than mail. They are becoming essential to provide poor rural
populations with access to affordable financial services, including
remittances, which amounted to over US$ 65 billion in 2015.
This will be the focus of the Second
African Conference on Remittances and Postal Networks to be held on 15
-16 November in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, and hosted by the International
Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).
“More than 15 per cent of adult Africans
use the over 26,000 existing post offices and postal agents to access
basic financial services, including picking up remittances. Most of them
live in rural communities many miles away from banks,” the Coordinator
of the Financing Facility for Remittances at IFAD, Pedro De Vasconcelos
said.
“In Africa, post offices are now
considered part of the nation’s social fabric and an immediate access
point to financial services.”
While the average cost of sending remittances is 7.6 per cent globally, Sub-Saharan Africa remains the most expensive region in the world in which to send money home, with an average cost of 9.5 per cent in 2016.
While the average cost of sending remittances is 7.6 per cent globally, Sub-Saharan Africa remains the most expensive region in the world in which to send money home, with an average cost of 9.5 per cent in 2016.
In an increasing number of African
countries, post offices are able to provide a remittance service at an
average cost of 5 per cent or less.
A new report exploring remittances and the role of the post office in Africa will be launched at the conference.
A new report exploring remittances and the role of the post office in Africa will be launched at the conference.
The IFAD report, “Remittances at the
post office in Africa: Serving the financial needs of migrants and their
families in rural areas,” focuses on African National Postal Operators
as distribution channels to provide access to remittances and financial
services.
It examines the role post offices play in Africa’s remittance market and ways to make these existing, publicly-owned assets more competitive and inclusive.
It examines the role post offices play in Africa’s remittance market and ways to make these existing, publicly-owned assets more competitive and inclusive.
About 120 delegates including national
postal operators, postbanks, regulatory authorities, governments,
private sector banks, money transfer operators, fintech firms,
international organizations, civil society and others involved in the
remittances market from across Africa will participate.
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