Artificial intelligence (AI) could create a turning point for financial inclusion in Africa (By Lillian Barnard)

- A cloud-powered payment revolution;
More recently, cloud technology has created a whole new realm of possibilities for fintech companies looking to accelerate financial inclusion, helping them scale their operations, create operational efficiencies and spin up new innovations overnight.
African payment giant,Flutterwave (https://apo-opa.
And as the barriers to AI adoption have fallen away, so new tools are giving rise to substantive productivity gains and revolutionising industries such as fintech.
While AI is providing champions of financial inclusion like Flutterwave with the tools they need to expand their reach, it’s also helping to fast-track access to financial services (https://apo-opa.co/

Banks, for example, can make their services more affordable to their customers by rolling out AI-powered chatbots to handle routine queries, at the same time sparing them from having to travel to a bank branch.
Already, fintech companies are helping their customers to improve their financial literacy by using these same chatbots as affordable advisors.
Mosabi (https://apo-opa.co/
What’s more,AI tools can analyse data from client discussions, producing legal documents in simple language and at a fraction of the cost of what it would typically take to draft a contract, extending access to these services in terms of both understanding and affordability.
Real-time lending at scale
Perhaps most important of all, many fintech companies have access to vast amounts of data, meaning that when AI is introduced to the equation, they have formidable ability to offer real-time digital lending on a major scale.
M-KOPA (https://apo-opa.co/
The company provides digital financial services to underbanked consumers by combining digital micropayments and IoT technology, drawing on cloud technology to process over 500 payments per minute, and making it possible for 3 million people across Africa to access essential services such as solar power systems, digital loans, health insurance and smartphones.
The use of AI has helped M-KOPA achieve significant increases in customer repayment performance – particularly for the follow-on products and services that M-KOPA offers to customers once they have successfully repaid their initial loan.
In fact, more than 440,000 additional credit lines have been made to customers following payment of their first product.
With the digital payments market maturing quickly in Africa and AI rapidly gaining traction among fintechs on the continent, the implications for accelerated financial inclusion are significant.
The question is –how do we ensure fintechs are able to fully realise the AI opportunity?
Much of the answer lies with capacity building, from infrastructure to connectivity, skills and essential digital tools.
Through key partnerships, such as our collaboration with Safaricom, we’re upskilling hundreds of thousands of developers to build new entirely new digital ecosystems.
Regulation is another hurdle that must be overcome to accelerate AI-powered payments in Africa.
In fact, many FSI organisations in Africa view the risk of new safety and regulatory requirements as one of the biggest stumbling blocks to wider implementation of the technology, hindering greater progress in financial inclusion.
Finding new ways of collaborating across industry and government is critical to the advancement of AI in financial services.
To this end, Microsoft continues to engage with the African Union and national governments in priority markets to help strengthen our collective role as responsible stewards of AI.
For some time now, Africa has been at the forefront of the payment technology revolution – empowering millions of people with access to financial services.

