02.10.2012 - An estimated one billion people are currently banked through the postal network, but despite having the largest number of contact points in the world, Posts are underused for financial inclusion, according to new research by the Universal Postal Union.
Fifty-one postal operators worldwide held 1.6 billion savings and
deposit accounts in 2010. With the average postal client holding an
estimated 1.5 accounts, this brings the number of people banked through
the Post to more than one billion, according to the research presented
at the 25th Universal Postal Congress in Doha.
With 660,000 contact points in the world, Posts and their financial
subsidiaries come only second to banks in their potential to contribute
to financial inclusion. There are 523,000 bank branches and ATMs in the
world, according to the International Monetary Fund.
“The postal network offers tremendous potential for fostering
financial inclusion,” says Alexandre Berthaud, one of the report’s
authors. “If only 51 Posts offering savings accounts can bank a billion
people, then the remaining postal operators of the UPU’s 192 member
countries, especially strongly populated ones such as Nigeria, Russia,
Mexico, Ethiopia and Colombia, could easily provide a gateway to
financially include at least 500 million unbanked people directly or
through partnerships with banks.”
The report recalls that several hundred million people also use the
Post to make and receive domestic and international transfers or pay
government or utility bills, whether or not they hold a postal savings
account.
Providing a global panorama on postal financial inclusion, the
research identifies five main categories of business models Posts use to
provide financial services and key issues for them to keep in mind when
providing such services or moving into more complex financial services.
The report finally recommends how postal operators could progressively
offer financial services.
New growth opportunities
Congress, the UPU’s supreme authority, last week adopted a resolution
urging member countries to continue developing financial services. It
recognized their value for contributing to the UN Millennium Development
Goal of reducing poverty, as well as helping the growth of small and
medium-sized businesses.
Financial services accounted for almost 12% of global postal revenues
worth 304 billion dollars, according to 2011 UPU statistics. In several
countries, such as China, India, Gabon, Tunisia, Bangladesh, Italy,
Azerbaijan, Belarus and Burundi, postal financial services produce more
than 50% of the Post’s revenues.
With the decline of letter-post volumes, financial services offer new
growth opportunities for postal services, and they are gaining ground
as Posts consider strategies to diversify the business.
A Post’s success in implementing financial services depends on 10 key
issues, including connectivity, financial capacity, automation, trust,
and the existence of a legal and regulatory framework, among others,
states the report.
Using capacity, automation and legal and regulatory framework as the
three key indicators for success and giving them a specific weight, UPU
researchers developed a success factor index and global ranking of
countries evaluated. According to this global ranking, Morocco comes out
on top as the developing country with the most potential for providing
financial inclusion, followed by Serbia, Belarus, Malaysia, Indonesia,
Tunisia, Kazakhstan, Brazil, China and Namibia closing the top 10.
The UPU hopes the index will be used to inspire Posts and governments
to utilize the postal network as a facilitator of financial inclusion.
Source : news.upu.in
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