Charges for electronic payments have been cut after an agreement between the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, banks and providers of payment platforms, the central bank announced yesterday.
RBZ announced it had reached an agreement with banks and service providers to cut fees “in order to promote and encourage the use of electronic bank services”.
RTGS transfers will now cost $5, down from $10 per transaction. Point-of-sale (POS) transactions of up to $10 will cost 10 cents, while a POS transaction of above $10 will be charged a maximum of 45 cents. If a customer uses a POS from their own bank, they will be charged 20 cents. ATM charges, which varied between banks previously, will now cost a maximum $2.50. Monthly administration or service fees are set at a maximum of $5.
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) has been battling to increase the use of bank cards and other electronic payment systems as part of its efforts to respond to a deepening cash crisis. However, high charges levied by banks have seen the public stay away from plastic money, preferring cash, which is now in short supply.
“It is envisaged that the reduction in transactional fees will go a long way in promoting the plastic money which is essential to move the economy towards a cashless society and to complement the current financial inclusion efforts,” the central bank said.
Banks have been reluctant to cut back on fees and charges, which now account for a large part of their earnings as banks pare down their core business of lending due to the rising risk of default.
A 2015 survey by FinTrust, which analyses banking trends in Africa, found that 70 percent of Zimbabwean adults do not have a bank account. Of the five million adults that are not banked, 74 percent percent said they do not have the money to save, 28 percent said they could not maintain the required minimum balances, while seven percent cited high bank charges.
Mobile money is now the largest mover of transactions in the economy, with RBZ stats showing it accounts for 89 percent of the number of transactions in the economy.
According to the latest available data, $402 million worth of retail transactions went through POS systems in the quarter to December 2015, compared to $420 million in the same quarter of 2014. As at December 2015, Zimbabwe had 16 363 POS terminals in use, and 556 ATMs.
At the close of 2015, there were 2 365 160 debit cards in issue in Zimbabwe against 3 613 781 in December 2014.- The Source
Related stories:
Zimbabwe orders government departments to accept rand
MDC-T says Mangudya should resign over Zimbabwe’s the cash crisis
Mugabe says cash crisis is temporary
FBC suspends MasterCard transactions to stop double dipping
Britain warns citizens visiting Zimbabwe about possible cash shortages
IMF to assess impact of introducing bond notes in Zimbabwe
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe to force businesses to bank cash
Ecocash to be hit by cash crisis
UK says bond notes could be damaging to confidence in Zimbabwe economy
Multi-currency system is dead says RBZ
Zimbabwean company says “bond notes” are adding to uncertainty
Chinamasa says Zimbabwe will not be a “fishing pond” for US dollars
Zimbabwe hires German firm to print bond notes
Zimbabwe’s bumpy, costly road to a cashless future
The government’s hidden hand in Zimbabwe’s cash crisis
Chinotimba says give people bond coins if they do not like bond notes
Chinamasa tells Parliament that bond notes are above board
Zimbabwe says it needs bond notes because “we are feeding looters”
Zimbabwe scraps plans to convert export earnings into rand, euro
Tsvangirai calls emergency national executive meeting Thursday to decide way forward on bond notes
It’s a stimulus package- Mangudya says
Tsvangirai to convene his cabinet tomorrow to discuss proposed bond notes
Bond notes -a legal perspective
Zimbabwe stems illicit outflows
Cash shortages – the real causes and the wrong diagnosis
New bond notes-key questions answered
Mangudya full statement on the introduction of bond notes
Highlights of RBZ intervention on cash shortages
MDC says Mugabe is bringing back Zimbabwe dollar through the back door
Zimbabwe to introduce bond notes as cash shortages bite
(43 VIEWS)
This post was last modified on %s = human-readable time difference 9:22 pm
Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa has repeatedly stated that he is not going to contest a…
The Zimbabwe Gold fell against the United States dollar for five consecutive days from Monday…
An Indian think tank has described Starlink, a satellite internet service provider which recently entered…
Zimbabwe’s new currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG), firmed against the United States dollars for 10…
Zimbabwe is among the top 30 countries in the world with the widest gap between…
Zimbabwe’s battered currency, the Zimbabwe Gold, which was under attack until the central bank devalued…