Marie sits with a group of other women outside a small vendor in Saint Marc, Voilá mobile phone in hand. They are waiting to spend the 1600 gourdes (US$40) that Mercy Corps just sent to their T-Cash accounts. As heads of households with IDPs (internally displaced persons) from the earthquake, they are among 5,000 recipients in Saint Marc who will receive money on their phones to buy rice, oil, beans, and cornflour from fifty small, local merchants. Our host for the day, Andrew Lucas, explains to us that this is a much more dignified way of distributing aid than MINUSTAH-guarded blind giveaways, and we wholeheartedly agree. Mercy Corps in Saint Marc are doing their best to make sure that their donations go to people who are most in need, and that their program is conducted with as much benefit to small businesses as possible.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
T-Cash town? Food aid and mobile money in Saint Marc
What's interesting to us is the overall mobile money landscape in Saint Marc. Thus far, Digicel's TchoTcho Mobile has no presence in the town, and Mercy Corps / Voilá have big plans for the next few months that will integrate an interesting range of players into their program. In April and May, Mercy Corps and the Red Cross will run a market once per week in which 2,500 of the current recipients will be given a one-off payment of US$250 to spend on materials to build or renovate their homes, or to pay school fees (including technical/trade school). Later on, half of these recipients will be selected for a third time to spend a further US$250 on tools for small enterprises.
Who will become T-Cash agents? At the moment, many of the businesses accepting food aid payments are displaying T-Cash signs and banners but are not actually agents. This is problematic because there is a risk of losing customers' confidence, should they try to use a service and find that it is not working. At the moment these merchants can accept payments for food aid and nothing else; their customers cannot cash in or cash out, nor can their other customers who are not aid recipients pay for food. Furthermore, most of these vendors are not eligible to become T-Cash agents because they are not registered businesses. Mercy Corps is working to train them in business skills and help them register their businesses.
--Erin B. Taylor
--Photo #1: Women waiting to buy Mercy Corps food using T-Cash. Photo by Erin B. Taylor.
--Photo #2: Merchants filling out paperwork for food aid purchases. Photo by Erin B. Taylor.
--Photo #3:Food aid beneficiaries waiting in line at a merchant, phones in hand. Photo by Erin B. Taylor.
--Photo #4: Small Mercy Corps affiliated merchant in Saint Marc. Photo by Erin B. Taylor.
Labels:
Haiti,
mobile money
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