Fintech

Central Bank of Kenya Set to Issue Payment Licences to Fintech Companies

What’s this about?

  • The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) plans to grant payment licenses to fintech startups, including Flutterwave and Chipper Cash, by updating the National Payment Systems Act of 2011.
  • The proposed changes aim to create a legal framework for fintechs to operate, potentially removing barriers that have previously allowed banks and telcos to dominate the market.
  • The amendments to the Payments Act could benefit fintech companies previously investigated for money laundering, enabling them to provide remittance and payment services legally in Kenya.

Zoom in…

The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has announced plans to grant payment licences to financial technology startups soon. This development is an important review of an initial regulation, and it’s expected to expand the country’s payment market. 

Two Nigerian-born fintech companies, Flutterwave and Chipper Cash, are reportedly vying for licences, among others. 

Context

In 2022, the financial regulator reportedly ordered financial institutions in the country, including banks and mobile money service providers, to stop dealing with fintechs. 

At the time, CBK claimed that the fintechs were operating without authorisation, citing unsubstantiated threats to Kenya’s financial systems.

What they’re saying…

Kamau Thugge, CBK governor, said the apex bank is working tirelessly to review the National Payment Systems Act of 2011 to provide a legal framework for fintech companies to operate.

 “We are in the process of updating and amending the Payments Act, basically coming up with a new act,” Thugge explained. 

The Big picture

If the change goes through, it’s expected to benefit companies that provide remittance and payment services that have initially been investigated and raided by Kenyan authorities on suspicion of money laundering. 

The new CBK proposed changes to the National Payment Systems Act, aiming to let fintech startups in Kenya register and receive licences. This could eliminate a legal barrier that has hampered the growth of fintechs in the country, allowing commercial banks and telcos to dominate.

Bottomline

Following a question by one publication concerning the status of Flutterwave and Chipper Cash registration in the country during the post-monetary policy committee (MPC) press briefing, the bankers’ bank hopes to finish the amendment as soon as possible to begin the process of “that would guide our way forward in terms of payments service providers space.” 

The East African nation’s financial sector is regulated under the Central Bank of Kenya Act, the National Payment Systems Act with the National Payment Systems Regulations of 2014, and the e-money Regulations of 2013. 

Source: techpoint.africa

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