Economist: A bank in your pocket? Depends on the rules
by Jim Rosenberg : Thursday, November 15, 2007
The Economist this week takes on mobile banking and the challenges and opportunities regulators are dealing with when it comes to increasing access to finance, quoting CGAP’s own Tim Lyman:
What can governments do to foster m-banking? As with the spread of mobile phones themselves, a lot depends on putting the right regulations in place. They need to be tight enough to protect users and discourage money laundering, but open enough to allow new services to emerge. The existing banking model is both over- and under-protective, says Tim Lyman of the World Bank, because “it did not foresee the convergence of telecommunications and financial services.”
CGAP has been working hard on this issue, in collaboration with DFID and the GSM Association – learning how regulation is working and how it could be improved in seven countries. The results of that work will be shared in a CGAP/DFID Focus Note in early 2008. For more information, please drop me a line or call me at +1 202 473-1084.

