PAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONS
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    South Africa: Ramaphosa Faces The Second-Term Curse

    -From Mbeki To Zuma, South Africa's Presidents Have Struggled To Leave Power…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Cameroon: The Unraveling Of The Old Order

    -As succession anxieties grow, institutions age, and public frustrations mount, Cameroon finds…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Senegal: The Diomaye–Sonko Balancing Act

    -As President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Ousmane Sonko drift apart, Senegal's celebrated…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Sierra Leone’s President Julius Maada Bio Arrives in Mauritania for High-Level Talks on Regional Peace and Security.

    Nouakchott–Oumtounsy International Airport, Nouakchott, Mauritania, Monday, 15 June 2026* – His Excellency…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    The Taxed Citizen And The Extravagant State : A Constitutional, Historical And Economic Indictment Of Africa’s Fiscal Crisis And The Betrayal Of The Social Contract

    -"When Governments Demand More From Citizens While Giving Less to the Republic…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Premier Invest Returns as Deal Room Sponsor for AEW 2026, Reinforcing Africa’s Leading Investment Marketplace

    Premier Invest will return as the Deal Room Sponsor at African Energy…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Amne Sued: “East Africa Must Move From Symbolic to Operational Integration”

    By Adonis Byemelwa* Following the Kigali CEO Forum 2026, Pan African Visions…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Beyond the Bullion: What Tanzania’s 27.5-Tonne Gold Reserve Really Means Economically

    By Adonis Byemelwa Gold has long been a universally recognized anchor of…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Mobile Technologies Contributed $240 Billion to Africa’s Economy in 2025 as the Continent Enters a New Phase of Digital Transformation

    New GSMA report highlights how AI, digital services and mobile connectivity are…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Building From Within: Akol Ayii and Africa’s Energy Future

    -Akol E. Ayii, Founder and CEO of Trinity Energy Group, has emerged…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Health
  • Sport
    SportShow More
    Africa at the 2026 World Cup: Ten Nations, One Continent, No More Excuses

    -For the first time in the history of football's greatest competition, Africa…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Top African referee Omar Artan to officiate 2026 UEFA Super Cup

    By Jean-Pierre A. Following discussions with its sister confederation, Confédération Africaine de…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    SLFA Names John Keister Interim Leone Stars Coach for Liberia Friendlies

    By Ishmael Sallieu Koroma The Sierra Leone Football Association (SLFA) has appointed…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    PUMA Ace Samir El Mourabet Called Up To The Moroccan World Cup Squad

    Ahead of this summer’s global football tournament, PUMA athlete and Morocco midfielder…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Cameroon: Ngannou Sends Heavyweight Warning with Brutal First-Round Finish

    By Ngunyi Sonita Nwohtazie Cameroon's global MMA icon, Francis Ngannou, made a…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Multimedia
    • Sports
    • Documentaries
    • Comedy
    • Music
    • Interviews
  • APO/PAV
  • AMA/PAV
    AMA/PAVShow More
    U.S. Embassy Pretoria Celebrates Mandela Day at Zola Community Health Center in Soweto

    PRETORIA, South Africa, July 22, 2019,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- To honor Nelson Mandela’s…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Zimbabwe: Droughts leave millions food insecure, UN food agency scales up assistance

    Severe drought has rendered more than a third of rural households in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Mozambique: Opposition candidate facing pre-election death threats and intimidation

    GENEVA, Switzerland, July 19, 2019,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- The main opposition candidate in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    The END Fund – Making everyday a Mandela Day

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, July 18th 2019,-/African Media Agency/- 2018 was a true landmark…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Innovation leaders gather in Nairobi to unpack Intelligent Enterprise opportunities at SAP Innovation Day.

    NAIROBI, Kenya , July 18, 2019 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/- About 600…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Media OutReach
    Media OutReachShow More
    GLM Launches Essential Clutch – Limited Edition to Complement Microsoft Surface Laptop, 13.8-inch

    NEW YORK, US - Media OutReach Newswire - 17 June 2026 -…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Vingroup Rises 11 Places In Fortune Southeast Asia 500, Ranking Among The Region’s Top 30 Largest Companies

    HANOI, VIETNAM - Media OutReach Newswire - 17 June 2026 - Vingroup…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    WRISE Group Officially Launches WRISE Academy in Wuxi

    This new office located in the Yangtze Delta region strengthens family governance…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Truecaller Ads Launches ‘Call-to-Cart’, a New Commerce Surface Built on the Communication Layer

    A first-of-its-kind full funnel solution built exclusively for direct advertisers that enables…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    SeABank completes charter capital increase to VND 34,288 billion

    HANOI, VIETNAM - Media OutReach Newswire - 17 June 2026 - With…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Blogs
    • African Show Biz
    • Insights Africa
    • Cumaland Diary
    • Kamer Blues
    • Nigerian Round Up
    • Ugandan Titbits
    • African View Points
    • Global Africa
  • Magazines
Search
  • Global Africa
  • Interviews
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • African Newsmakers
  • African View Points
  • Development
  • Discoveries
  • Education
© 2026. Pan African Visions. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Why Taxing Mobile Money in Africa Costs More Than It Yields
Font ResizerAa
PAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONS
  • Politics
  • Business in Africa
  • Blog
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Multimedia
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sport
  • Multimedia
    • Sports
    • Documentaries
    • Comedy
    • Music
    • Interviews
  • APO/PAV
  • AMA/PAV
  • Media OutReach
  • Blogs
    • African Show Biz
    • Insights Africa
    • Cumaland Diary
    • Kamer Blues
    • Nigerian Round Up
    • Ugandan Titbits
    • African View Points
    • Global Africa
  • Magazines
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2025 Pan African Visions.  All Rights Reserved.
PAN AFRICAN VISIONS > Blog > Africa > Why Taxing Mobile Money in Africa Costs More Than It Yields
AfricaBusiness in AfricaEditorialFeatured

Why Taxing Mobile Money in Africa Costs More Than It Yields

Last updated: May 11, 2026 8:50 pm
Pan African Visions
Share
Mobile money now counts more than 2.1 billion registered accounts worldwide, the majority in Sub-Saharan Africa, with over 514 million active users according to the ECA.
SHARE
Mobile money now counts more than 2.1 billion registered accounts worldwide, the majority in Sub-Saharan Africa, with over 514 million active users according to the ECA.

A growing number of African countries now levy taxes on mobile money transactions. The IMF, the World Bank and the UN Economic Commission for Africa all reach the same conclusion: it is costing more than it yields. Some governments are changing course. Others are still searching for the right balance.

Contents
  • From financial lifeline to tax target
  • The fiscal paradox: taxing what broadens the base
  • A tax that hits hardest those with no alternative
  • The wrong signal to investors
  • Ghana: a policy reversal with a costly lesson
  • There is a better way
  • A political choice, not an inevitability

In Uganda, it all came down to a single budget cycle. A daily levy on social media and digital transactions was introduced. The results, documented by the UN Economic Commission for Africa’s 2026 Economic Report on Africa, were swift: more than 2.5 million internet subscribers lost and a 25% drop in mobile money transactions within months. The users hadn’t disappeared. They had simply gone back to cash.

Uganda is far from alone. By the end of 2025, roughly twenty Sub-Saharan African countries had introduced some form of mobile money taxation. Some target transaction values, others operator revenues, others the platforms themselves. No common framework, no regional coordination. Each country running its own experiment — often at the expense of the most vulnerable.

The paradox is stark: while international institutions urge governments to use digital tools as a lever for tax collection, several African governments are still treating mobile money as a direct tax target.

From financial lifeline to tax target

Mobile money now counts more than 2.1 billion registered accounts worldwide, the majority in Sub-Saharan Africa, with over 514 million active users according to the ECA. In Kenya, M-Pesa drove financial inclusion from under 30% to more than 83% in under a decade. Mobile money is no longer just a financial service — it has become economic infrastructure.

It is precisely because that infrastructure became indispensable that tax authorities took notice. Digital transactions are visible, traceable, and their volume has surged since the Covid-19 pandemic. In a continent grappling with high debt, shrinking fiscal space, and declining foreign aid, they look like a convenient revenue stream.

The temptation is understandable. But the outcomes are frequently counterproductive. Academic research and institutional analysis converge: these taxes can reduce usage of digital financial services by as much as 39% in certain contexts, according to the Danish Institute for International Studies. User behaviour is predictable — when costs rise, people consolidate payments, delay transactions, or return to cash.

“The principle is to mobilise revenues while having a limited impact on the poorest segments — relying as much as possible on digitalisation where there are clear benefits.”

Amadou Sy, IMF Africa Department — Spring Meetings, Washington, April 2026

The fiscal paradox: taxing what broadens the base

The case for these levies is fundamentally budgetary: collect where economic activity is visible. It is a coherent argument. It is also profoundly short-sighted.

Mobile money is one of the most powerful formalisation tools African governments have. By making transactions traceable and pulling millions of informal economic actors into identifiable financial circuits, it naturally broadens the tax base. A 2025 study covering 36 African countries establishes a positive correlation between financial inclusion and tax revenues. The more people use digital financial services, the greater the state’s capacity to collect — provided usage is not discouraged.

Taxing transactions, then, is cutting the branch you are sitting on. The ECA’s 2026 report is unambiguous: digital tools should be a lever for tax collection, not a target.

Kenya illustrates the alternative. By integrating mobile money data into AI-driven detection systems, the country reduced VAT fraud by nearly 30% between 2019 and 2021. Mobile money now processes the equivalent of one billion Kenyan shillings per day in public revenue-related payments.

A tax that hits hardest those with no alternative

Behind the numbers is a straightforward social reality: these taxes fall first on those who have no other option.

A three-year study by the International Centre for Tax and Development on Ghana’s e-levy demonstrated exactly this: despite built-in exemptions, the heaviest fiscal burden landed on lower-income households. In a region where more than 85% of jobs are in the informal sector, mobile money is often the only access point to the financial system. For a market trader in Kumasi or a motorcycle taxi driver in Kampala, it is not a convenience — it is an economic survival tool.

Wealthier users have bank accounts. They adapt. Everyone else pays the price — or goes back to cash.

“The cost of data remains an issue. If we truly want our youth to use these technologies, we need to figure out how to make access affordable.”

Stephen Karingi, Director, Macroeconomic Division, UN ECA — Tangier, April 2026

The ECA’s 2026 report is unambiguous: digital tools should be a lever for tax collection, not a target.

The wrong signal to investors

There is a third consequence, quieter but equally costly: the message sent to investors. Africa is actively seeking large-scale capital for its fintech and digital ecosystems. Yet for many sector players, fiscal instability is a more immediate deterrent than lack of financing. Taxes introduced without industry consultation or abruptly revised create an environment of uncertainty that makes long-term investment unattractive.

At the IMF and World Bank Spring Meetings in April 2026, African leaders pressed the case for investing in digital infrastructure to underpin artificial intelligence and digital financial systems. Taxing digital usage without a coherent strategic vision sends precisely the wrong signal to the investors the continent is trying to attract.

Ghana: a policy reversal with a costly lesson

Ghana offers the clearest example. Long held up as a model of digital financial inclusion, the country introduced an e-levy in 2022 — a 1.75% tax on electronic transactions, later reduced to 1%.

The effects were immediate: transaction volumes fell, users returned to cash, and public opposition was vocal and broad. Both major political parties campaigned on scrapping the tax in the 2024 presidential election. When John Mahama took office, he abolished it on 2 April 2025. Parliament voted unanimously.

But the ICTD points to a less visible consequence: the levy’s abolition also dismantled the digital fiscal data infrastructure built around it. The e-levy’s real potential was never in the revenue it generated — it was in the economic flow data it produced, allowing Ghana’s revenue authority to identify previously unregistered, high-income taxpayers. Ghana ended up losing both the revenue and the tools.

There is a better way

More effective models already exist. Kenya remains the continental benchmark, but others are following. In South Africa, AI-powered compliance and risk management systems generated over 101 billion rands in additional revenues between 2022 and 2023, according to the ECA. Rwanda is developing comparable approaches.

In each case, the logic is inverted: digital tools identify untaxed income rather than taxing the transactions themselves. At the 2026 Spring Meetings, Nigeria presented a similar approach — improving domestic resource mobilisation while simultaneously reducing the fiscal burden on lower-income earners.

The balance is achievable. Tax operators rather than users. Use mobile money data to identify significant informal-economy earners. Connect digital platforms to tax and customs systems. These approaches are documented, tested, and produce more durable revenues without compressing inclusion.

“The question is no longer whether Africans can finance this transformation. It is whether we will do so collectively, strategically, and at scale.”

Claver Gatete, Executive Secretary, UN ECA — Tangier, April 2026

A political choice, not an inevitability

The fiscal pressure pushing African governments toward mobile money taxation is real. In 2025, African governments were spending nearly one fifth of their revenues on debt service. Fiscal space is shrinking. Social needs are growing.

But the short-term yield logic can become a long-term dead end. International institutions, academic research and the accumulated experience of multiple countries now converge on the same finding: excessive mobile money taxation tends to yield less than expected, undermines financial inclusion, and falls hardest on the most vulnerable.

The information problem is solved. The data exists. The alternatives exist.

What remains is a political choice: between the logic of immediate extraction and a long-term strategy of economic transformation — one that treats digital infrastructure not as a source of revenue to be milked, but as a foundation to be protected.

For the millions of Africans that mobile money has gradually brought into the formal economy, this distinction is not abstract. It is measured in daily costs, in the return to cash, and in years lost on the road to financial inclusion.

Share This Article
LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Galaxy Macau Celebrates 26 Awards Winning Standout Recognition at Tatler Best Hong Kong & Macau Awards 2026
Next Article EAC Warned: Global Conflicts Pose Direct Threat to Regional Stability and Economies
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your Trusted Source for Accurate and Timely Updates!

Our commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and delivering breaking news as it happens has earned us the trust of a vast audience. Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events, trends.
FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
LinkedInFollow
Diestmann

You Might Also Like

African NewsmakersAlgeriaAngola

From Uganda to the United States – The Inspiring Journey of St. George’s University Alumna Dr. Geraldine Nabeta

By
Pan African Visions
AlgeriaAngolaBenin

Are businesses prepared for the ‘return to work’ security risks?

By
Pan African Visions

Sommet G20 Finances: Les grands dossiers au menu

By
Pan African Visions

Zuma Has Broken Businesses’ Trust, South African Lobby Says

By
Pan African Visions
PAN AFRICAN VISIONS
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Medium

About US


Pan African Visions: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 news.

  • 7614 Green Willow Court, Hyattsville, MD 20785 , USA
  • +1 24 0429 2177
  • pav@panafricanvisions.com
Top Categories
  • Politics
  • Business in Africa
  • Blog
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Multimedia
  • Contact
Usefull Links
  • PAV – Home
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Complaint
  • Advertise With Us

© 2026 Pan African Visions. 
All Rights Reserved.