• News
    • Latest news
    • News search
    • Health
    • Finance
    • Food
    • Career news
    • Content series
    • Try Devex Pro
  • Jobs
    • Job search
    • Post a job
    • Employer search
    • CV Writing
    • Upcoming career events
    • Try Career Account
  • Funding
    • Funding search
    • Funding news
  • Talent
    • Candidate search
    • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Events
    • Upcoming and past events
    • Partner on an event
  • Post a job
  • About
      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Contact us
Join DevexSign in
Join DevexSign in

News

  • Latest news
  • News search
  • Health
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Career news
  • Content series
  • Try Devex Pro

Jobs

  • Job search
  • Post a job
  • Employer search
  • CV Writing
  • Upcoming career events
  • Try Career Account

Funding

  • Funding search
  • Funding news

Talent

  • Candidate search
  • Devex Talent Solutions

Events

  • Upcoming and past events
  • Partner on an event
Post a job

About

  • About us
  • Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Advertising partnerships
  • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Contact us
  • My Devex
  • Update my profile % complete
  • Account & privacy settings
  • My saved jobs
  • Manage newsletters
  • Support
  • Sign out
Latest newsNews searchHealthFinanceFoodCareer newsContent seriesTry Devex Pro
    • News

    Mobile phone banking for Kenya’s poor? Not so fast

    By Ivy Mungcal // 03 April 2012

    Sophisticated mobile phone banking may sound promising given the rise of similar mobile financial services but its success has yet to be proven — at least in Kenya.

    This is according to Garbriel Demombynes, senior economist at World Bank’s office in Nairobi, Kenya. Demombynes and a colleague, Aaron Thegeya, analyzed a sophisticated “branchless banking” service that makes use of mobile phones as part of a working paper they wrote about Kenya’s mobile revolution.

    Dubbed M-KESHO, the service allows uses to keep an interest-bearing savings account and apply for microloans or personal accident insurance — all accessible using a mobile phone. It was inspired by the success of M-PESA, another mobile money service that allows people to store and transfer money through electronic accounts.

    But unlike the widely used M-PESA, the mobile banking service enjoyed limited success in its first six months, Demombynes says. One explanation may be the low marginal gain of using M-KESHO to store savings versus using M-PESA for the same purpose, he notes.

    M-KESHO’s 3 percent interest rate is better than M-PESA’s zero offering but still unimpressive considering Kenya’s 16 percent inflation rate, Demombynes says. He explains that M-KESHO may be unable to offer higher interest rates because of “the complex technical and institutional arrangements the system requires.”

    “The bottom line is that sophisticated ‘branchless banking’ via mobile phone remains an unproven approach in Kenya,” Demombynes writes. “This is not to say that such efforts are doomed: other similar experiments are under way, and we may eventually see one succeed.”

    Read more development aid news online, and subscribe to The Development Newswire to receive top international development headlines from the world’s leading donors, news sources and opinion leaders — emailed to you FREE every business day.

      Printing articles to share with others is a breach of our terms and conditions and copyright policy. Please use the sharing options on the left side of the article. Devex Pro members may share up to 10 articles per month using the Pro share tool ( ).

      About the author

      • Ivy Mungcal

        Ivy Mungcal

        As former senior staff writer, Ivy Mungcal contributed to several Devex publications. Her focus is on breaking news, and in particular on global aid reform and trends in the United States, Europe, the Caribbean, and the Americas. Before joining Devex in 2009, Ivy produced specialized content for U.S. and U.K.-based business websites.

      Search for articles

      Related Stories

      Sponsored by the GSMAOpinion: Mobile credit, savings, and insurance can drive financial health

      Opinion: Mobile credit, savings, and insurance can drive financial health

      FinanceOpinion: Can a $40 loan change a life? In Kenya, the answer is yes

      Opinion: Can a $40 loan change a life? In Kenya, the answer is yes

      Devex Career HubDevex Career Hub: How AI is transforming development work

      Devex Career Hub: How AI is transforming development work

      Opinion: FinanceFinancing models are failing African SMEs, so we’re pioneering solutions

      Financing models are failing African SMEs, so we’re pioneering solutions

      Most Read

      • 1
        Opinion: Why critical minerals need global regulation
      • 2
        Opinion: Time to make food systems work in fragile settings
      • 3
        Trump administration releases long-awaited global health strategy
      • 4
        US lawmakers propose sweeping State Department reforms
      • 5
        Opinion: The time to prioritize early and integrated CKM care is now
      • News
      • Jobs
      • Funding
      • Talent
      • Events

      Devex is the media platform for the global development community.

      A social enterprise, we connect and inform over 1.3 million development, health, humanitarian, and sustainability professionals through news, business intelligence, and funding & career opportunities so you can do more good for more people. We invite you to join us.

      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Post a job
      • Careers at Devex
      • Contact us
      © Copyright 2000 - 2025 Devex|User Agreement|Privacy Statement