Farmers |
The idea for Bank
of Kigali to launch its own disruptive Fintech start-up came out of some
soul-searching discussion in 2016 around the 50th anniversary of the
bank. It asked itself big questions like: who are we and where do we
want to be?
According to
Rugemanshuro:"Tech is disrupting every sector and banks are definitely
included in that and are at biggest risk. We were looking at what the
fintechs and telcos were doing with mobile money. The best way to
approach this was to plan to disrupt from within. We have the skills,
financial muscle and market to do it better. We can bring innovation
before the innovators got scale and we needed a tech company to do it".
Rwanda's biggest
bank, Bank of Kigali is not a retail bank (for individual customers) but
a corporate bank with 300,000 customers including a lot of small
companies. But on this basis it has a 35% market share.
The Bank of Kigali
knew where it wanted to get to but decided that the important thing was
the end (paying for something), not the means (technology):"The
challenge is how to transform how 70% of farmers, teachers and students
pay for things and we're going to focus on things like paying for food,
school fees or fertilizer".
The plan is to
operate in 4 key sectors: agriculture, education, real estate and
health. It decided to focus on agriculture first because 70% of people
live off of agriculture and it makes up 30% of GDP.
"The biggest
platform (of our platforms) is in agriculture. What does the farmer
need? We need to create locally relevant content and services. Rwanda
has 95% 4G coverage and 76% mobile penetration but people are not using
it so much. The first thing they do is meet basic needs. They pick up
the phone for buying seeds, agricultural information and finance. The
banks said we don't know what these people do. The teacher gets a loan
easier than a farmer because they have a regular salary".
"We told the banks
we're going to de-risk agriculture for you and we told the farmers we're
going to give you an app to do exactly what you're already doing.
You're buying seeds and getting information on paper".
The Government has a
subsidy programme for 2 million that accounts for 40-75% of seeds and
fertilizer sold:"We're going to digitalize that scheme. Previously there
were 3-year delays on payments because Government has to check whether
things have happened or not. So we said to Government, we're going to
build a platform and the only requirement is that you put us directly in
contact with the 2 million farmers in the subsidy scheme. We ran a
pilot in December 2017 for a thousand farmers and it worked. People used
it and could see the improvements".
Phase 1 is to
facilitate registration and implementation and it was launched in second
week in March with 140,000 farmers. Rugemanshuro believes that it will
have close to 500,000 in the following 2 weeks and it wants to have 1.5
million farmers on the platform by July. Every single farmer recovering
subsidy from the Government scheme will have to use the platform.
Phase 2 is the
ordering and processing seeds and fertilizer by the farmer: "We know
where the farmer lives so we recommend seeds and fertilizers appropriate
to that location. We can see all the farmers in real time, how much
land they have and how much seeds and fertilizer they order in relation
to the area being farmed".
"We will be able to
enforce best practice. We can SMS them to remind them to pick up their
seeds and fertilizer. We have 20,000 trained agronomists and they will
train them how to use the platform".
The platform will
also be able to collect data:"Banks and government have never seen this
kind of data. You can slice and dice data down to the village level.
There are KPIs at national level and the data can be used as a way to
measure these national KPIs. We can identify where farmers are poor and
couldn't get loans".
So Phase 3 is the
integration with the financial institutions:"We're not just working for
the Bank of Kigali but building for the whole market. The more the
merrier. The more in the pipeline bringing in traffic, the more
transactions. We will make money on the transactions".
"How do we de-risk
for the banks? The suppliers and middlemen will hardware to be part of
the system. When money is put in the wallet, it can only be used to buy
seeds and fertilizers. It's a tied loan. If you don't use the loan
within 3 months, the money will expire".
"Rwanda is currently 20% cashless but wants to be 80% cashless by 2024. We can easily make agriculture a cashless system".
Rwanda wants to be
able to increase both the quality and quantity of the harvest. Currently
it's difficult for say hotels to buy produce at an agreed price. These
companies will be part of the scheme. Farmers will know who will buy at
an agreed price.
There's also a
Yield Predictive Model that it's working with AIMS in Kigali on:"We want
to be able to say to farmers, with the size of the land you've got, the
seeds you bought and amount of fertilizer you used and you should be
able to expect this amount of crop. Farmers are not informed enough".
"It's about the
things you don't see in Africa. My dream is to see the amount loaned to
agriculture in double digits in the second year. I want to see farmers
able to build a credit history. The platform allows everyone to play a
role to their best. The farmers don't need a bank account to get
funding. They can come from different providers like mobile operators.
Financial inclusion will increase. Cashless will increase. It will
reduce the amount of paper being used. If we get the right seeds and
fertilizers, we will know the yields".
"We're working on a
micro-insurance scheme with a Moroccan partner. If I'm a farmer and I
did everything right and it didn't rain, I can get insurance to cover
this risk. It can cover the cost of the seed and the fertilizer".
"The system is
completely exportable. Think of how many countries make financial
inclusion payments? We're talking about expansion to Zimbabwe and other
countries in Africa".
It wants to do the
same with an education platform to make payments of school fees easier
but that can also offer other helpful services to parents and school
teachers. The other two platforms will be real estate (being built for
tenants and lenders) and health.
With agriculture,
BK TecHouse has an interesting combination of: customers that need it to
get their subsidy; tied loans for specific things; and a vision of
creating an ecosystem for everyone.
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