VOA标准英语2009年-Kenya Pioneers New Way to Transfer Money(在线收听) |
By Cathy Majtenyi As Stephen Mbugua works on his farm a half-hour drive from the capital Nairobi, his mobile phone beeps. He is getting a text message saying that his son has sent the elderly farmer some money - through the mobile telephone. Mbugua is a customer of a service called MPESA, offered by a mobile phone company called Safaricom. People who wish to transfer money through their mobile phones can do so at locations across Kenya. Phelister Omari, 22, who works in a hospital in Nairobi, is sending money to her mother. She fills out a form with the amount she wishes to send, plugs that amount into her telephone, and gives the clerk the amount plus extra for charges. People who are sent money go to the agent with their mobile phone, sign a form, and receive the cash. The MPESA service was launched in Kenya in 2007. Similar services have since been introduced in other countries. "What MPESA provided is a safe and affordable way of doing this instantly from your phone so you longer have to have a third party," said Betty Mwangi-Thuo, the chief officer of new products for Safaricom. Having a money transfer system that goes directly from phone to phone is changing Kenyan society. Sociologist Beneah Manyuru Mutsotso says that, while MPESA has not closed the rich-poor gap, it has allowed people to increase their social and financial status. "One, to own the phone enhances status. Two, the fact that you have money in the mobile phone in a kind of bank in which you have total control, full control, with almost no charges, and the fact that it works almost, I would say, 24 hours. It has no limitations; it has no obstacles and constraints of time or other physical constraints [such as] the fact that you don't have to queue for long," Mutsotso said. Mutsotso says people no longer have to go without food or other basics if they can reach out for help through the telephone. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2009/10/83412.html |