Mobile Money Interoperability up by over 350% in first quarter

Mobile money transfers across different networks, also known as Mobile Money Interoperability (MMI), have shot up by 358 percent in the first three months of this year, compared to the same period last year.

The volume went up to over 5.12 million transactions from 1.11million in the first quarter of last year, according to figures from the Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement Systems (GhIPSS), a subsidiary of the Bank of Ghana.

Sending money from one wallet to another of a different telecommunications network was only possible through the token system, which was complicated until the MMI was introduced in May 2018.

Since its introduction, it has become easier to transfer funds across wallets of different networks. This possibility has also led many organisations to set up their systems to accept mobile money payments.

Mr Archie Hesse, the Chief Executive of GhIPSS, said in an interview with the Ghana News Agency that the MMI has made payments through mobile money one of the most efficient and easy to access.

He, therefore, urged all businesses to accept payments from mobile money wallets as one of the default modes of payment or risk losing out on potential income.

When MMI started, volume of transactions hovered around 100,000 per month but monthly transactions have since crossed the one million mark with the month of March, 2020 recording close to two million transactions.
MMI transactions include transfers from wallets to bank accounts as well as from wallets to e-zwich cards.

Myjoyonline