Resisting the devil: using mobile money in Haiti
Resisting the devil: using mobile money in Haiti
- February 2, 2011
As I boarded a plane bound for Haiti in December 2010, I received a text from one of my research assistants that says that Voila had just launched its mobile money service, T-Cash. It was followed closely by Digicel’s TchoTcho mobile. The advent of mobile money in Haiti is interesting and exciting. As an anthropologist I was curious to see how this new technology was going to change internal migration and remittance patterns between Port-au-Prince and the provinces. My interest in mobile money is also personal. As a Haitian with friends and relatives living in different parts of the country, the prospect of sending money electronically is particularly welcome. With mobile money I no longer have to rely on expensive money transfer services, bus drivers who offer remittance services, or send money with friends and relatives who are travelling back to their home towns.
Once in Haiti, I set out to register for both services. Registering for Voila’s T-Cash
required sending a text to their dedicated number using your Voila phone. Within a
few minutes you receive the secret pin required for withdrawal and transfers. Digicel’s
TchoTcho Mobile is a little more bureaucratic as it requires in-person registration
with a valid state-issued ID and a photocopy of said ID. As with any new service,
there were some kinks that both companies needed to work out. Although both companies
boast agents throughout the country, or Port-au-Prince in the case of Digicel, finding
an agent is not always easy. On the day I registered for TchoTcho, I had to visit
four agencies. At the first store we were told that the agent had been called away
elsewhere; the second agency did not have an internet signal, while the third had
sent their laptop out for repair. However, six weeks on, it is easy to find functioning
TchoTcho agencies, even though Digicel has not officially launched their service and
are not advertising. T-Cash is another story: while we have found numerous businesses
with the T-Cash sign on the front of their shop, few of them are actually operational.
Another one of mobile money’s attractions is the ability to top up your phone account
from your mobile money account. Using mobile money, you save the 10% tax that you
pay when you buy a phone card. Mobile money is also economic in terms of time and
convenience. Prior to mobile money I could only top up my phone using a phone card
or a Pap Padap vendor. These transactions are limited because they require agent which
is not always available either because of where I am or because shops are closed.
While online top up is available, it is not an option for many people because it requires
internet access and a credit card, two luxuries that are not readily available in
Haiti. No story could illustrate the significance of mobile money for topping up your
phone as this scenario presented by Samuel, a 19 year old university student. He said,
“Have you ever been talking to a girl late at night and just when the conversation
gets interesting you run out of money on your phone? At this hour there is not a store
open or an available Pap Padap or Direk Direk vendor. Even if there were, you would
be too scared to go out at that time. With Mobile money you can continue the conversation
without losing momentum because once lost, you cannot recapture that moment.”-----
Would you like to get more involved with the social sciences? Email us at communications@socsci.uci.edu to connect.
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