By
Matthew Baker, 17 March 2006
Electronic
means of payment, otherwise known as e-payment, though
practiced in some countries such as South Africa,
Tunisia and Egypt faces uphill challenges in Africa.
This
is one of the main conclusions of the three-day forum
on ICTs, trade and economic growth held from 14-16
March 2006 here in Addis Ababa.
The
Department of Mathematics and Computer Science of
the Addis Ababa University, in collaboration with
ECA, shared the results of a survey on existing status
of e-payment in the World, Africa in general and in
Ethiopia in particular.
Challenges
for e-payment in Africa included lack of inadequate
telecommunication infrastructure because of the rural
divide which exists in Africa.
Noted
problems related to infrastructure include frequent
connectivity failure in telephone lines; low bandwidth
for Internet, high cost of Internet, availability
of Internet, which especially at peak hours is low,
unavailability of dedicated data service networks
and closed financial networks including frequent power
interruption.
However,
it was also revealed that banks in Africa were slow
on the uptake of automation, and many are not networked
though some efforts are underway particularly among
the private banks.
"To
a large extent Africa and many African countries remain
a cash-based society and using credit cards is not
an option which hampers the growth of e-commerce",
according to Dr Dawit Bekele, Addis Ababa University.
Consequently, the absence of proper legal and regulatory
frameworks in many African countries and the low level
of credit card access are a clear indication of the
main challenges of e-payment in Africa.
Dr.
Bekele proposed a vision for "establishing a
secure, affordable and open e-payment system for Ethiopia
before the end of the Ethiopian Millennium".
He also stated that "most African countries are
lagging behind in e-commerce, and if Africans can’t
do e-commerce within their country, it is very unlikely
that they can deal with the rest of the world, and
this could have catastrophic effects on Africa's economy
as 'globalization is inevitable'".
The
forum however recognised the advantages of e-payment,
including increasing efficiency - in that every e-payment
can reduce costs, among other things.
Participants
called on ECA to document and disseminate best practices
in ICT, trade and economic growth in Africa and organise
a special workshop focusing on e-payment in Africa
to develop prototypes and models that African countries
can use.
This
came about as a result of DISD's Internship programme
for Addis Ababa University students who have developed
a prototype e-payment application for Ethiopia, which
was demonstrated at the Forum. In addition, there
are plans to implement the prototype as a pilot project
under the DISD/ECA-AAU VarsityNet programme.