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Iraq to boost retail banking via mobiles, Internet

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Iraq to boost retail banking via mobiles, Internet

Mon, May 9 2011
* Iraq payment system (IPS) to cost $15-20 million
* Retail banking important for Iraq's financial stability
By Serena Chaudhry
BAGHDAD, May 9 (Reuters) - Iraq plans to introduce a $15-20 million central payment system within a year as it looks to tap into mobile and internet banking to help boost transactions in its private retail banking sector, officials said on Monday.
The project, based on a memorandum of agreement between Iraq's central bank and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), will allow individuals and businesses to make and receive interbank and international payments electronically via a single gateway.
"It is a very important project, increasing the capacity of private banking ... so we co-operate fully with this project," said central bank Governor Sinan al-Shibibi, adding he expected the system to be online in the coming year.
"Access to information, access to accounts, movement of accounts. All these things will be very important to maintain stability of the system in general."
Iraq hopes the IPS (Iraq payment system), which will allow customers to bank using their mobile phones and the Internet, will help spur activity in its relatively dormant private retail banking sector.
Iraq's banking sector is dominated by two state-owned banks, Rafidain and Rashid. Many Iraqis trust these banks as they have known them for a long time compared to private banks, which are often reluctant to lend in the absence of an efficient court system which can settle disputes.

REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
The mobile phone market, which did not exist under Saddam Hussein, has boomed since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled him, although Internet penetration in the country remains low at three percent.
Carl Rosenquist, of banking technology company Monetics, which is involved in implementing the retail payments system, said he expected the project to cost around $15-20 million and hoped to finish it within 12 months.
However, the success of the project relies on Iraq approving the required legislation to mandate that local banks connect their banking systems to a central payments system.
"This is crucial. And the same goes for the mobile payment system and the SWIFT (global financial transaction system). If they do not mandate the use of it, then it is useless," Rosenquist said.
The IPS is also expected to help instil confidence among Iraqis in the country's banking system as a centralised electronic gateway that would help track any illegal transactions, reduce dependence on cash and would be a faster and more secure method for banking, officials said.
"We must create transactions because this is how the banking system works ... To make banking and payments available any time and for anybody," said Rosenquist, who has implemented similar banking systems in other places around the world including the Philippines and Maldives. (Editing by Jim Loney and Jane Merriman)








http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/09/iraq-banks-idUSLDE7481RG20110509

Panhead

Panhead
Admin

again....

The Central Bank intends to introduce a completion of the transactions via mobile phones

Iraqi Central Bank announced that he was working on completing the project that will provide dealers with banks to complete all banking transactions, such as opening accounts and make withdrawals and transfers of Finance, through the use of their mobile phones.
Bank Consultant appearance of Mohammed Saleh told Radio Free Iraq that the project jointly accomplished companies and international experts with the support of the World Bank for the purpose of completion within the next two years will make it easier for users to many of the operations of cash and speed, safety and the decline of the mass of the large cash currently in circulation, like those in place in many countries in the world.
Board member of the Association of Banks, Iraqi Abdul Aziz Hassoun believed in the project both positive and negative repercussions on the work of banks and their customers, noting that the implementation of the project will increase the field of many banking transactions, and extends from the circle to deal with banks.

Friday, May 20, 2011

http://ar.radionawa.com/Detail.aspx?id=6157&LinkID=197

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Be kinda hard to do at a crappy rate of 1170...just saying

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