The global remittances industry is now worth over $500bn a year and, for bitcoin advocates, it represents unimpeachable proof of the need for decentralized digital currency.
With high fees on international money transfers and few players in the market, the space is, to use the cliché, ripe for disruption.
Enter BitPesa, a bitcoin remittances company that integrates with Kenyaâs mobile money system M-Pesa. Its success in challenging giants like Western Union in the Kenyan market will signal whether or not bitcoin can compete in the remittances market globally.
BitPesa CEO Elizabeth Rossiello calls herself a âdevoteeâ of micro-finance champion Muhammad Yunus, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for his groundbreaking work challenging poverty with small community loans.
â[BitPesa] is a social business, certainly for profit but weâre not maximising our margins,â Rossiello told CoinDesk.
A former investment banker with a long pedigree in microfinance, Rossiello was new to bitcoin when co-founder Duncan Goldie-Scot, former Director of the International Financial Cryptography Association, approached her about the idea.
Bitcoin, she recognised, could help âcut throughâ the inefficiencies in international remittances and the underdeveloped banking system in East Africa:
â[When youâre] trying to butt your head against a system that doesnât work, especially in these markets when thereâs other things going on, anything that can cut through that just letâs the sunshine in.â
With a 3% fee on transfers, BitPesa isnât quite the peer-to-peer system bitcoin advocates dream of when talking up the potential for bitcoin in the remittances industry.
Indeed, when you add in the separate cost of buying bitcoin in order to transfer it, the effective cost to the user is likely to be 3â4% or higher depending on the exchange. Compared with Western Union, which has a 7% fee for sending $100, for example, to a mobile wallet in Kenya, itâs only possibly a little cheaper.
Rossiello argued that BitPesaâs low fees are unmatched for the service they provide and that as the business develops and increases in size, âour ability to offer cheaper margins will go up.â
Peer-to-peer bitcoin remittance transfers are currently unfeasible for a country like Kenya, she explained. There arenât enough places to spend bitcoin and the people receiving remittances arenât in the position to invest their money in a speculative project like bitcoin:
âPeople on Reddit go off saying this is just another middleman. People [in Kenya] are even more sensitive to income flows, how can they risk losing anything or [risk vendors] not accepting bitcoin? They canât just hold the [bitcoin], they donât have extra money to invest.â
Furthermore, there is a £400 maximum limit on each BitPesa transfer because of the serviceâs connection to the M-Pesa mobile money system.
âThere is a limit because the amount of mobile money youâre allowed to get in one transaction is 70,000 [Kenyan] shillings,â said Rossiello. In future, BitPesa plans to allow transfers to bank accounts, which would effectively eliminate this restriction.
The five-strong BitPesa team, which includes staff across several continents, as well as in Kenya, is paid in bitcoin and is going up against an antiquated and slow-to-adapt international financial system.
âInternational transfers are far more manual than anyone suspects,â said Amy Ludlum, BitPesaâs Head of Trading Risk Management. âThere is somebody actually reading these comments on wires and, if they see anything that they donât necessarily like, they can arbitrarily reject them.â
BitPesa itself has experienced first hand the friction in the current system, recently having an international wire transfer rejected repeatedly by an intermediary before transferring the funds via bitcoin instead.
Ludlum declined to name the bank and says the transfer may have been rejected because of its connection to bitcoin:
âWe canât know anything for sure because we donât receive any comments from these intermediaries, but the fact that it said bitcoin on this wire makes us think that may be the reason our funds were held hostage.â
The incident hasnât held BitPesa back. The business is currently open to all customers, unless youâre in the United States.
âWeâre compliant, we just donât want to pay the [US] licensing fees,â explained Rossielo. âItâs super expensive for a lean startup. $50,000 per state, thatâs crazy.â
BitPesa officially launched in May. Only time will tell if it can overcome the challenges other bitcoin remittances companies have faced.
Image credit:Â Digital Democracy / Flickr