I choose to celebrate the fact that as of last year 6M Kenyans were able to borrow money (access to credit is key to become first world) digitally. We are basically leapfrogging - and that is how to become first world quickly.
Sigh. If only it were that simple ... then, surely, we would all be in the first world. But perhaps you can explain it all to me. Looking at the countries that have most recently made the rapid economic journey from the bottom---and I am here thinking of East Asian countries---I can see how access to credit is important. But in all those cases the credit went into evidently
productive activities that propelled the economy with
manufacturing taking the lead. How "personal loans", with a whopping 31% going into trivial and unproductive gambling, can be compared with that is unclear to me. Please explain; and in your explanation, keep in mind that Kenya's economy is a long way from one that is driven by the provision and goods under the umbrella of "consumer spending". In other words, what exactly are the 6M Kenyans doing with their borrowings that will move Kenya into the "first world"?
Usage of loan..
35 per cent of Kenyan digital borrowers use digital credit to meet day-to-day household needs while 37 per cent borrow for business reasons.
35% borrowing just to meet day-to-day household needs seems to be a very serious problem. Ati "first-world problems"!. Among other things, it tells us that whatever they do "for a living" is nowhere near enough to actually make a living. The fact that the borrowing is "digital" does not hide or help with the obvious financial distress. Or should it be celebrated as a "first-world problem" because smartphones and computers are involved?
On Savings...
The report also shows that 46 per cent of digital borrowers in Kenya also save digitally while 18 per cent have never saved digitally.
So?