Africa Development
by CODESRIA
openjournathemelogo
Quick jump to page content
  • Main Navigation
  • Main Content
  • Sidebar

Africa Development
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  • Register
  • Login
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  1. Home
  2. Archives
  3. Vol. 44 No. 3 (2019): Africa Development: Special Issue on Money, Security and Democratic Governance in Africa (III)
  4. Articles

Issue

Vol. 44 No. 3 (2019): Africa Development: Special Issue on Money, Security and Democratic Governance in Africa (III)

Issue Published : February 3, 2020

5 - Mobile Money and the Human Economy: Towards Sustainable Livelihoods for Zimbabwean Migrants in South Africa

https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v44i3.670
Emma Mavodza
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5363-5574

Corresponding Author(s) : Emma Mavodza

emaodza@gmail.com

Africa Development, Vol. 44 No. 3 (2019): Africa Development: Special Issue on Money, Security and Democratic Governance in Africa (III)
Article Published : February 12, 2019

Share
WA Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Pinterest Email Telegram
  • Abstract
  • Cite
  • References
  • Authors Details

Abstract

This article explores ways in which Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa send, receive and give money through mobile technological innovations. Specifically, the article looks at how the unbanked people access and manage money in their daily lives. Most of these migrants are undocumented and find it difficult to open accounts as financial institutions require certain specifications such as proof of residence, (local) identity cards, work permits, traceable physical addresses and three current consecutive months’ payslips. However, with the advent of mobile money, these migrants can easily relay money to Zimbabwe which records a high influx of remittances which are sustaining an ailing economy and improving the livelihoods of the people. The article also demonstrates ways in which the (un)banked are excluded or included in the transaction of money through social networks, kinship ties, solidarity relationships and other forms of non-monetary exchanges. In addition, it analyses the extent to which mobile money has impacted on social, economic and political relations of the unbanked. Using qualitative methodology, I also illustrate how mobile money improves the unbanked’s access to money and enhances the creation of a society with the attributes of a human economy with reduced inequalities.

Keywords

Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa unbanked people mobile money human economy

Full Article

Generated from XML file
[1]
Mavodza, E. 2019. 5 - Mobile Money and the Human Economy: Towards Sustainable Livelihoods for Zimbabwean Migrants in South Africa. Africa Development. 44, 3 (Feb. 2019). DOI:https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v44i3.670.
  • ACS
  • APA
  • ABNT
  • Chicago
  • Harvard
  • IEEE
  • MLA
  • Turabian
  • Vancouver
Download Citation
Endnote/Zotero/Mendeley (RIS)
BibTeX
References
  1. Aker, J.C., 2010, ‘Information from markets near and far: mobile phones and Agricultural markets in Niger’, American Economic journal: Applied Economics 2 (3): 46–59.
  2. Aker, J.C. and Mbiti, M., 2010, ‘Mobile phones and economic development in Africa’, Journal of Economic Perspective 24 (3): 207–32.
  3. Aggarwal, S. and Klapper, L., 2013, Designing Government Policies to Expand Financial Inclusion: Evidence from around the World, University of California and Development Research Group: World Bank.
  4. Ballard, R., 2012, ‘Geographies of development II: cash transfers and the reinvention of development for the poor’, Progress in Human Geography 37 (6).
  5. Chang, M.L., 2010, Short-changed: Why Women Have Less Wealth and What Can Be Done About It, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  6. Collins, D., Murdoch, J., Rutherford, S. and Ruthven, O., 2009, Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  7. Demirguc-Kunt, A., Beck, T. and Honohan, P., 2008, Finance For All? Policies and Pitfalls in Expanding Access. A World Bank Policy Research Report, Washington, DC: World Bank.
  8. Demirguc-Kunt, A. and Klapper, L., 2012, The Global Findex Database: New Data on Accounts and Payments Findex Notes, Washington, DC: World Bank.
  9. Demirguc-Kunt, A. and Klapper, L., 2013, Measuring Financial Inclusion: Explaining Variations in Use of Financial Services across and within Countries, Brookings Paper on Economic Activity, Brookings Institution Press.
  10. Donovan, K., 2012, ‘Mobile Money and Financial Inclusion’, in T. Telly, and M. Minges, eds, Information and Communication for Development, Washington, DC: World Bank.
  11. Dupas, P., Karlan, D., Robinson, J. and Ubfal, D., 2018. Banking the Unbanked? Evidence from three countries. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 10(2), pp.257-97.
  12. Ferguson, J., 2004 [1990], The Anti-politics Machine: ‘Development’, Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  13. Fukuyama, F., 1995, Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity, New York: Free Press.
  14. Gallup, 2012, Zimbabwe media use 2012, http://www.bbg.gov/wp-content/media/2012/11/gallup-zimbabwe-brief.pdf, accessed 23 November 2014.
  15. Gergen, K., 2002, ‘The Challenge of Absent Presence’, in J.E. Katz and M. Aakhus, eds, Perpetual Contact, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  16. Guyer, J.I., 1993, ‘Wealth in people and self-realisation in Equatorial Africa’, Man 28: 243–65.
  17. Hart, K., Laville, J. and Cattani, A.D., 2010, The Human Economy, Cambridge: Polity Press.
  18. Hart, K., 2001, Money in an Unequal World: Keith Hart and his Memory Bank, New York: Texere.
  19. Johnson, S., 2004, ‘Gender norms in financial markets: evidence from Kenya’, World Development 32 (8): 1355–74.
  20. Lindley, A., 2008, ‘The North–South divide in everyday life: Somali Londoners sending money home’, Bildhaan: An International Journal of Somali Studies.
  21. Lindley, A., 2009, ‘Remittances in conflict: some conceptual considerations’, Journal of Economics and Statistics 229 (6): 774–86.
  22. Makina, D., 2010, ‘The impact of regional migration and remittances on Development: the case of Zimbabwe’, http://www.microfinancegateway.org/sites/default/files/mfg-en-paper-the-impact-of-regional-migration-and-remittances-on-development-the-case-of-zimbabwe-oct-2010.pdf, accessed 23 November 2014.
  23. Maodza, T., 2014, ‘Zimbabwe attains food self-sufficiency’, The Herald, http://www.zimbabwesituation.com/news/zimsit_m_zim-attains-food-self-sufficiency-the-herald/, accessed 23 November 2014.
  24. Maurer, B., 2011, ‘Regulation as retrospective ethnography: mobile money and the arts of cash’, Banking and Finance Law Review 21 (1): 299–313.
  25. Mauss, M., 1967, The Gift, New York: Norton.
  26. Martin, M., 2009, ‘Hundi/hawala: the problem of definition’, Modern Asian Studies 43 (4): 909–37.
  27. Molony, T.S.J., 2007, ‘“I don’t trust the phone; it always lies”: trust and information and communication technologies in Tanzanian micro and small enterprises’, Information Technologies and International Development 3 (4): 67–83.
  28. Monsuti, A, 2004, Afghanistan War and Migration: Social Networks and Strategies of the Hazaras of Afghanistan, London: Routledge.
  29. Noko, J., 2011, ‘Dollarization: the case of Zimbabwe’, Cato Journal 31 (2): 339–65.
  30. Plaza S. and Ratha, D., eds, 2011, Diaspora for Development in Africa, Washington, DC: World Bank.
  31. Polanyi, K., 2001 [1944], The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of our Time, Boston, MA: Beacon Press.
  32. Rakopolous, T., 2013, ‘The crisis seen from below, within, and against: from solidarity economy to food distribution cooperatives in Greece’, http://repository.up.ac.za/bitstream/handle/2263/41201/Rakopoulos_Crisis_2014.pdf?sequence=1, accessed 28 October 2014.
  33. Rutherford, Stuart (2000), The Poor and their Money. New Delhi: Oxford.
  34. Schramm, M. and Taube, M., 2003, ‘Evolution and institutional foundation of the Hawala financial system’, Internal Review of Financial Analysis 12 (4): 405–20.
  35. Scott, J., 1988, Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance, New Haven, CT: Yale University of Press.
  36. Sen, A., 1999, Development as Freedom, New York: Anchor Books.
  37. Singh, S., 1997, Marriage money: the social shaping of money in marriage and banking. Allen & Unwin.
  38. Singh, S. and Bhandari, M., 2012, ‘Money management control and in the Indian in joint family cross generations’, Sociological Review 60 (1): 46–67.
  39. Sultana, F., 2009, ‘Community and participation in water resources management: gendering and naturing development debates from Bangladesh’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 34 (3): 346–63.
  40. Suri, T., Jack, W. and Stoker, T.M., 2012, ‘Documenting the birth of a financial economy’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109: 10257–62.
  41. UNDG, 2010, Country Analysis Report for Zimbabwe, United Nations, Harare.
  42. UNDP, 2010, United Nations Report, United Nations, Zimbabwe.
  43. Verhoef, G., 2001, ‘Informal financial service institutions for survival: African women and stockvels in urban South Africa’, Enterprise and Society 2 (2): 259–96.
  44. World Bank, World Development Report, 2000/1, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPOVERTY/Resources/WDR/approutl.pdf, accessed 28 October 2014.
  45. World Bank, 2009, ‘Migration and remittances trend 2009’, Migration and Development Brief 11.
  46. Yunus, M., 2003, ‘Expanding micro-credit outreach to reach the Millennium Development Goals: some issues for attention’, Dhaka: Grameen Bank.
  47. Zelizer, V.A., 2011, Economic lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Read More

References


Aker, J.C., 2010, ‘Information from markets near and far: mobile phones and Agricultural markets in Niger’, American Economic journal: Applied Economics 2 (3): 46–59.

Aker, J.C. and Mbiti, M., 2010, ‘Mobile phones and economic development in Africa’, Journal of Economic Perspective 24 (3): 207–32.

Aggarwal, S. and Klapper, L., 2013, Designing Government Policies to Expand Financial Inclusion: Evidence from around the World, University of California and Development Research Group: World Bank.

Ballard, R., 2012, ‘Geographies of development II: cash transfers and the reinvention of development for the poor’, Progress in Human Geography 37 (6).

Chang, M.L., 2010, Short-changed: Why Women Have Less Wealth and What Can Be Done About It, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Collins, D., Murdoch, J., Rutherford, S. and Ruthven, O., 2009, Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Demirguc-Kunt, A., Beck, T. and Honohan, P., 2008, Finance For All? Policies and Pitfalls in Expanding Access. A World Bank Policy Research Report, Washington, DC: World Bank.

Demirguc-Kunt, A. and Klapper, L., 2012, The Global Findex Database: New Data on Accounts and Payments Findex Notes, Washington, DC: World Bank.

Demirguc-Kunt, A. and Klapper, L., 2013, Measuring Financial Inclusion: Explaining Variations in Use of Financial Services across and within Countries, Brookings Paper on Economic Activity, Brookings Institution Press.

Donovan, K., 2012, ‘Mobile Money and Financial Inclusion’, in T. Telly, and M. Minges, eds, Information and Communication for Development, Washington, DC: World Bank.

Dupas, P., Karlan, D., Robinson, J. and Ubfal, D., 2018. Banking the Unbanked? Evidence from three countries. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 10(2), pp.257-97.

Ferguson, J., 2004 [1990], The Anti-politics Machine: ‘Development’, Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Fukuyama, F., 1995, Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity, New York: Free Press.

Gallup, 2012, Zimbabwe media use 2012, http://www.bbg.gov/wp-content/media/2012/11/gallup-zimbabwe-brief.pdf, accessed 23 November 2014.

Gergen, K., 2002, ‘The Challenge of Absent Presence’, in J.E. Katz and M. Aakhus, eds, Perpetual Contact, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Guyer, J.I., 1993, ‘Wealth in people and self-realisation in Equatorial Africa’, Man 28: 243–65.

Hart, K., Laville, J. and Cattani, A.D., 2010, The Human Economy, Cambridge: Polity Press.

Hart, K., 2001, Money in an Unequal World: Keith Hart and his Memory Bank, New York: Texere.

Johnson, S., 2004, ‘Gender norms in financial markets: evidence from Kenya’, World Development 32 (8): 1355–74.

Lindley, A., 2008, ‘The North–South divide in everyday life: Somali Londoners sending money home’, Bildhaan: An International Journal of Somali Studies.

Lindley, A., 2009, ‘Remittances in conflict: some conceptual considerations’, Journal of Economics and Statistics 229 (6): 774–86.

Makina, D., 2010, ‘The impact of regional migration and remittances on Development: the case of Zimbabwe’, http://www.microfinancegateway.org/sites/default/files/mfg-en-paper-the-impact-of-regional-migration-and-remittances-on-development-the-case-of-zimbabwe-oct-2010.pdf, accessed 23 November 2014.

Maodza, T., 2014, ‘Zimbabwe attains food self-sufficiency’, The Herald, http://www.zimbabwesituation.com/news/zimsit_m_zim-attains-food-self-sufficiency-the-herald/, accessed 23 November 2014.

Maurer, B., 2011, ‘Regulation as retrospective ethnography: mobile money and the arts of cash’, Banking and Finance Law Review 21 (1): 299–313.

Mauss, M., 1967, The Gift, New York: Norton.

Martin, M., 2009, ‘Hundi/hawala: the problem of definition’, Modern Asian Studies 43 (4): 909–37.

Molony, T.S.J., 2007, ‘“I don’t trust the phone; it always lies”: trust and information and communication technologies in Tanzanian micro and small enterprises’, Information Technologies and International Development 3 (4): 67–83.

Monsuti, A, 2004, Afghanistan War and Migration: Social Networks and Strategies of the Hazaras of Afghanistan, London: Routledge.

Noko, J., 2011, ‘Dollarization: the case of Zimbabwe’, Cato Journal 31 (2): 339–65.

Plaza S. and Ratha, D., eds, 2011, Diaspora for Development in Africa, Washington, DC: World Bank.

Polanyi, K., 2001 [1944], The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of our Time, Boston, MA: Beacon Press.

Rakopolous, T., 2013, ‘The crisis seen from below, within, and against: from solidarity economy to food distribution cooperatives in Greece’, http://repository.up.ac.za/bitstream/handle/2263/41201/Rakopoulos_Crisis_2014.pdf?sequence=1, accessed 28 October 2014.

Rutherford, Stuart (2000), The Poor and their Money. New Delhi: Oxford.

Schramm, M. and Taube, M., 2003, ‘Evolution and institutional foundation of the Hawala financial system’, Internal Review of Financial Analysis 12 (4): 405–20.

Scott, J., 1988, Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance, New Haven, CT: Yale University of Press.

Sen, A., 1999, Development as Freedom, New York: Anchor Books.

Singh, S., 1997, Marriage money: the social shaping of money in marriage and banking. Allen & Unwin.

Singh, S. and Bhandari, M., 2012, ‘Money management control and in the Indian in joint family cross generations’, Sociological Review 60 (1): 46–67.

Sultana, F., 2009, ‘Community and participation in water resources management: gendering and naturing development debates from Bangladesh’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 34 (3): 346–63.

Suri, T., Jack, W. and Stoker, T.M., 2012, ‘Documenting the birth of a financial economy’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109: 10257–62.

UNDG, 2010, Country Analysis Report for Zimbabwe, United Nations, Harare.

UNDP, 2010, United Nations Report, United Nations, Zimbabwe.

Verhoef, G., 2001, ‘Informal financial service institutions for survival: African women and stockvels in urban South Africa’, Enterprise and Society 2 (2): 259–96.

World Bank, World Development Report, 2000/1, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPOVERTY/Resources/WDR/approutl.pdf, accessed 28 October 2014.

World Bank, 2009, ‘Migration and remittances trend 2009’, Migration and Development Brief 11.

Yunus, M., 2003, ‘Expanding micro-credit outreach to reach the Millennium Development Goals: some issues for attention’, Dhaka: Grameen Bank.

Zelizer, V.A., 2011, Economic lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Author Biography

Emma Mavodza

University of Witwatersrand. Email: emaodza@gmail.com

Download
PDF
Statistic
Read Counter : 1908 Download : 64

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Table Of Contents

Make a Submission

Make a Submission

Language

  • English
  • Français (France)

Information

  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians

Africa Development

 

Providing a forum for the exchange of ideas among African scholars from a variety of intellectual persuasions and various disciplines.
ISSN :  0850-3907

Make Submission

Our Editorial Team

Godwin Rapando Murunga
Editor-in-Chief
CODESRIA Executive Secretary
sA-3XlIAAAAJ
 
Read More
 
Editorial Pick

Towards Understanding the Cameroon-Nigeria and the Eswatini-South African Border Dispute through the Prism of the Principle of uti possidetis juris Customary International Law

December 25, 2022
Hlengiwe Portia Dlamini et al.

Enjeux de la pédagogie contrastée de l’histoire dans les sous-systèmes anglophone et francophone pour les politiques mémorielles au Cameroun

November 29, 2022
Nadeige Ngo Nlend et al.

Modernisation minière, fragmentation sociale et création des anormaux en République démocratique du Congo

May 19, 2022
Emery Mushagalusa Mudinga et al.

Localising the SDGs in African Cities: A Grounded Methodology

November 19, 2022
Omar Nagati et al.

‘Ghanaian first’: Nationality, Race and the Slippery Side of Belonging for Mixed-Race Ghanaians

June 11, 2022
Karine Geoffrion et al.

Les facteurs historiques de la demande en tissus identitaires au Nigeria et en Inde,

February 25, 2022
Jocelyne Boussari et al.

The Impact of Agricultural Extension Service on the Uptake of Various Agricultural Technologies in Ethiopia

December 16, 2022
Mesfin Hiwot et al.

The Curse or Fertility of Land Clearing: How Migrant Labour Modified Gender-Based Division of Labour in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania

November 12, 2022
Angelus Mnenuka et al.

Genre et cyber-radicalisation au Sénégal et au Mali

May 12, 2022
Selly Ba et al.

Rethinking the Pan-African Agenda: Africa, the African Diaspora and the Agenda for Liberation

November 19, 2022
Moses khisa

Author Resources

  •    Author Guidelines
  •     Download Manuscript Template
  •   Review Process

SCImago Journal & Country Rank

Similar Articles

  • Abdelkader SID AHMED, 2 - Le développement et l'agriculture en Algérie depuis l'indépendance , Africa Development: Vol. 6 No. 3 (1981): Africa Development: A Special Number on Agriculture
  • Abdalla S. BUJRA, AD, Volume 6, n° 2, 1981 - Full Issue , Africa Development: Vol. 6 No. 2 (1981): Africa Development
  • A.D. Adeoye, 7 - Book Reviews: The Political Economy of Crisis and Underdevelopment in Africa , Africa Development: Vol. 15 No. 1 (1990): Africa Development
  • Abdalla S. BUJRA, AD, Volume 1, n° 1, 1976 - Full Issue , Africa Development: Vol. 1 No. 1 (1976): Africa Development
  • AD, Volume 41, n° 4, 2016 - Full Issue , Africa Development: Vol. 41 No. 4 (2016): Africa Development
  • Abdalla S. System, AD, Volume 2, n° 2, 1977 - Full Issue , Africa Development: Vol. 2 No. 2 (1977): Africa Development
  • Paul Tiyambe Zeleza, 6 - Book Reviews: Gendering African History , Africa Development: Vol. 18 No. 1 (1993): Africa Development
  • Pierre JACQUEMOT , 2 - La semi-industrialisation contemporaine , Africa Development: Vol. 6 No. 2 (1981): Africa Development
  • journal system, AD, Volume 43, n° 3, 2018 - Full Issue , Africa Development: Vol. 43 No. 3 (2018): Africa Development
  • Journal System, AD, Volume 17, n° 1, 1992 - Full Issue , Africa Development: Vol. 17 No. 1 (1992): Africa Development

<< < 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

 Address

Publication and Dissemination Programme
1046 Av. Cheikh Anta Diop P.E 11, angle Canal IV
P.O Box: 3304 Dakar, 18524, Senegal

 OTHER LINKS

  • Become a member
  • Publish a book
  • Publish on our journals
  • Online Library Catalogue
  • Purchase a Book

  Contact Info

+221 33 825 98 22/23
publications@codesria.org

 Social Media

   
© 2023 CODESRIA
Themes by Openjournaltheme.com
Themes by Openjournaltheme.comhttps://journals.codesria.org/index.php/adThemes by Openjournaltheme.com