The Financial institution of Ghana has ordered the suspension of a proposed 0.75% price on cellular cash transfers to financial institution accounts after the cost sparked widespread public outrage.
The Financial institution of Ghana (BoG) has directed Cell Cash Fintech Restricted (MMFL), the cellular cash arm lately separated from MTN Ghana, to droop billing pending additional consultations. MMFL informed prospects on Could 25 that it might impose a price of as much as 5 cedis per transaction for transfers from wallets to banks from June 1. The central financial institution issued its directive the following day, saying the price adjustments have to be launched pretty and “shield customers and help their financial well-being.”
This reversal launches into a fragile debate over the prices of digital funds. Cell cash has introduced hundreds of thousands of beforehand unbanked Ghanaians into the monetary system, and every little thing from utilities and college charges to salaries and commerce can now be dealt with by means of wallets. In Ghana, the variety of energetic wallets will attain 26.7 million in 2025, a rise of roughly 14% year-on-year.
Monetary inclusion consultants say even small charges form habits. Low-income customers usually reply by sending fewer, bigger quantities or storing money for smaller purchases, which may gradual the transition away from banknotes and cash. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are additionally feeling it, with some retailers steering prospects towards money, setting minimal quantities for cellular funds, or passing on charges.
Carriers counter that the charges fund agent networks, cybersecurity and the infrastructure that retains the methods working, and that digital funds nonetheless outperform money when it comes to safety, pace and record-keeping. The strain displays a backlash in opposition to the digital switch levy (E-levy), which was launched at 1.5% in 2022 and later decreased to 1%.
Analysts have urged that decrease charges for small-value transactions and elevated competitors might result in better adoption with out depleting suppliers’ income. For now, problems with affordability stay central to how shortly Ghana can transition to a cash-neutral financial system.
