scattered across the Indian Ocean southwest of India, the Republic
of Maldives has long been starved of formal banking facilities
which are confined primarily to the 17 branches of the country’s
only national bank, the Bank of Maldives.
initiative, the Mobile Phone Banking Project, launched by the
Maldives Monetary Authority (MMA).
implementation of the project that will create a single currency
(Maldivian rufiyaas) payment system which offers a set of mobile
telephone-based accounts.
the system must be capable of enabling subscribers to transfer
funds to and from bank accounts and to and from telephone-based
accounts. In addition, the project aims to build an enabling
environment and the capacity to support additional mobile phone
banking systems in future.
organisations, international development agency the World Bank and
the Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP), a microfinance
development consortium of 33 public and private funding
organisations.
million credit grant and CGAP funding of $1.5 million. The World
Bank estimates the total cost of the project at $10.55
million.
coverage of the mobile phone network, the country has a great
potential to use technology to overcome the barriers of geography
and low population density to deliver financial services at low
cost across the country,” said World Bank’s country director for
the Maldives, Alastair McKechnie.
the Maldives’ population is just over 379,000 with the largest
industry, tourism, accounting for 28 percent of its GDP. The
Telecommunications Authority of the Maldives reported that the
country’s three mobile phone service suppliers had a total of
335,762 subscribers at the end of March 2008 compared with about
262,000 two years earlier. The dominant carrier, Dhiraagu, reported
275,000 subscribers at the end of March 2008.