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Cellphone Banking Helping To Fight Poverty In India

An anonymous reader writes "Technology Review is running an in-depth story about the way cellphone banking is transforming the lives of many poor people in India. By enabling users to manage a legitimate bank account and finance micro-loans, cellphones are a major force of social and economic change. It's perhaps not surprising, given that despite widespread poverty, India has the world's fastest-growing cellphone market and the second largest number of cellphone users (after China). The article mentions one Indian start-up, mChek, that is thriving as a result. There's also an excellent video report."

6 of 76 comments (clear)

  1. Poverty by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cell phones are like computers and the internet rolled into one for those poor people in India.

    I bet in the next ten years, markets in India and Africa are going to be the hotspot for 3.5/4G wireless internet service through cell handsets. I imagine that their governments will encourage the building of cell infrastructure because they can see how cell access is helping people become upwardly mobile.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Poverty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ah, an American. Of course, America has no caste system as everyone treats everyone else as an equal all the time.

  2. Re:Super security by Lonedar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, that kinda makes sense. There shouldn't be a way of obtaining the card information short of reading it off the actual credit card.

  3. Duh... by apathy+maybe · · Score: 5, Informative

    Of course China and India have the largest cell phone populations in the world... They have more then 1 third of the worlds population between them.

    (Know why more people are using cell phones and not land lines? It's a shit load easier to throw up towers then to run cables. And a shit load easier to guard against people stealing the metal for raw materials.)

    Cell phones are great for poor people, especially farmers. They can ring up potential buyers before travelling a day to market. (They might travel south instead of north.)
    I've also read that they are used to send money back home for people (from the country side who live) in cities. They buy cell phone credit, then they ring a fellow in the home village and tell him the voucher number, and he types it into his phone and gets the credit, and then gives that amount of money (minus a small fee) to the family.

    Innovation comes, so often, from necessity.

    --
    I wank in the shower.
  4. never mind the phones... by owlnation · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... in India, they still have banks!!! They're RICH!!!

  5. Re:Food, water, shelter not necessary. Nokia 6220! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It does not make sense to you, because you are thinking of progress only in traditional way.

    India does not work that way. It is a chaotic system, with a lot of entropy, and has lot of redundancy built in. Normally, you would expect a country/society/country to move bottom to top. i.e. improve life in terms of health, economy and education, then move on to develop better means to accelerate the progress. But it has not work in India. There are lots of social, economical, religious factions and factors why India can not operate that way. It is a country of conflicting priorities.

    The result is that we have successful space programs, successful telecommunication infrastructure while still a lot people die of hunger. But somehow, we have still managed to get better - though not in very rapid/efficient way. There are less % of people below poverty line (even if you do not believe government numbers), life expectancy has improved. At the same time, villages are breaking up and cities are clogged.

    So, its erratic, and it does not make sense. But we still have just launched our moon mission. Go figure.