Author: L-IFT

DFS: Promote Digital Savings as an Anchor Product

Last week Thursday, 7th September, Enterprise Partners hosted a workshop for banks and others involved in Digital Financial Services (DFS). The findings of its Assessment of Transaction Pools for DFS. In this second blog: Which Digital Financial Products should be launched in Ethiopia? According to the recommendation of the consultant, Anne Marie van Swinderen. She […]

The Secretive Characteristics of Digital Money

Digital money transactions have worldwide become the custom due to enhanced technologies. This system has seen use in most countries around the world and our nation, Ethiopia, is starting to follow in their footsteps, with the potential to largely enhance the country’s economic growth. In this blog, we will lay the focus on “privacy/secrecy” when […]

Encouraging Encounters With Merchants in Ethiopia

Digital Money is a new phenomenon in Ethiopia. Through my interaction with various individuals, I realized that the majority has either never heard about it or does not really know what it is. Interestingly, the lack of awareness about digital money does not particularly refer to certain segments of the society. From students through to farmers, they […]

Savings Groups

Through my field interactions with research respondents, I started wondering how they usually get loans. The first institution, which probably comes to one’s mind, is a bank. However, when I asked Khainza Nuru, a study participant in Mbale, her answer was ‘ekibina’, which means “group” in the local dialect and basically refers to Savings Groups. […]

Being a Research Participant – An Opportunity to Take Stock of One’s Progress

On April 5th I traveled to Busede sub-county, which is a few miles from Jinja Town, to join field researcher Julius Kimalyo as he carried out the end line interviews, the final field activity of the FEDU research project. After a bumpy 20-minute ride on a “boda boda”, I arrived at the Namaganga trading center and […]

Smoke Signals

During my field visits to rural study participants, a frequent sight was the thick smoke billowing from the respondents’ kitchens. Some of these kitchens were straw-thatched mud houses, others were iron-roofed mud structures or even makeshift structures. The kitchen walls were often soot-coated, blackened by smoke from open fires. This blog is therefore dedicated to […]

Rebecca’s Experience Working as a Team Supervisor

Each of the regional clusters of the FEDU project areas was under the leadership of a team supervisor, who acted as the link between the project management team and all the local stakeholders. Ajambo Rebecca, one of the team supervisors in the central districts of Mukono, Kayunga, and Buikwe shared her experience working with the […]

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