financial services

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Mobile phone banking in Haiti

The Gates Foundation just finished hosting the Global Savings Forum which included exploring how the poor can expand their use of mobile phones for financial services.

For a look at how this works, here’s a video about such a project Mercy Corps and a Seattle wireless company has already launched in Haiti:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YGfWC343CaQ&feature=youtu.be

Gates Foundation invests half a billion dollars to fill in savings gap for the poor

Flickr, caribbeanfreephoto

Over the last few decades, one of the most popular anti-poverty schemes around the world has been microcredit — getting small loans to the poor.

Microfinance, generally referring to a range of services aimed at the poor, is now a huge — sometimes controversial — industry.

But what’s been missing from microfinance is savings.

“The poor don’t have a safe or efficient means for saving,” Melinda Gates said today at a Seattle confab called the Global Savings Forum. Lack of savings keeps the poor at risk of any costly emergency, she says, or simple theft.

Today, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced it will be investing half a billion dollars over the next five years in “microsavings” — helping the poor find new ways to save what little money they do make.

One increasingly popular method involves using mobile phones as basically a hand-held ATM and banking transfer system. In Kenya, a program known as M-PESA (Swahili for money), allows the poor to use their cell phones to buy, transfer and collect small sums of money. Continue reading