| > Per this article, only 20% of people in Bangladesh have traditional bank accounts. Yet 33 percent of Bangladeshi men have used mobile money. Mobile money has replaced the bank account. Unless I'm mistaken, that still doesn't sound like it would actually help the people that they claim that need it. You can't put physical cash into the mobile banking. [Well at least without using a transaction service, which would tack on fees] > Are there legitimate needs for a cellphone in their life?
> Do you have legitimate needs for a cellphone in your life?
> For a wallet, credit and debit cards? We're talking about different cultures. They've survived and accomplished life goals without a cellphone in their life. Could I go without a cellphone? Absolutely. I could go to a landline. But thats not the point here. > A cellular phone will help someone learn a fair price for their crop, good, or service, and allow them to contact buyers. This will do more for their income than a suit. But access to cellphones and mobile money doesn't just benefit people by increasing income. Giving women the ability to make purchases has listed benefits in the article: You're making an assumption that they will use the phone in the best case. To call someone over a fair price.... but you have to know those people in the first place. To further drive this point home: If you were buying a car, who would you call to compare prices? (Using internet services on your phone won't count for this.. as that in this culture it would be a new concept to find others in the market via a mobile) > "Women spend money differently from men. They tend to invest more in the health and well-being of their families — as much as 10 times more. They give priority to spending on health care, nutritious food and education. A child born in a household where the mother controls the family budget is 20 percent more likely to survive — and much more likely to thrive." That sounds like a gender based stereotype. |
Yes you can. You can typically deposit without fees at airtime resellers and cell network retail outlets. Faster and cheaper than traveling to a bank branch.
Fees to cash out/send/receive money are as low as 0.22%.
Could I go without a cellphone? Absolutely. I could go to a landline. But thats not the point here.
This article and my question were more about the phone's ability to replace a credit/debit card and bank account, not a landline.
To call someone over a fair price.... but you have to know those people in the first place... If you were buying a car, who would you call to compare prices?
You call your family members, previous buyers, or middlemen in cities to get a rough sense of the market price. There are startups that offer crop price data via SMS.
http://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/how-mobile-phones-are-tra...
[Women invest more in the health and well-being of their families — as much as 10 times more] ... That sounds like a gender based stereotype.
Clicking through on the links in the NYT article went to this article in Science (http://www.sciencemag.org/content/345/6202/1273.full.pdf) which cites the following four sources for those statistics:
World Bank, World Development Report 2012: Gender Equality and Development (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2011); http://elibrary.worldbank.org/doi/book/10.1596/ 978-0-8213-8810-5.
D. Thomas, in Intrahousehold Resource Allocation in Developing Countries: Models, Methods and Policy, L. Haddad, J. Hoddinott, H. Alderman, Eds. (Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, Baltimore, MD, 1997), pp. 142–164.
R. L. Blumberg, Ed., Engendering Wealth and Well-Being: Empowerment for Global Change (Latin America in Global Perspective) (Westview Press, Boulder, CO, 1995).
E. Duflo, “Women’s empowerment and economic development,” working paper 17702 (National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA, 2011); available at www.nber.org/papers/w17702