Every month, tens of thousands of Ugandan households receive life-sustaining  remittances from family members living abroad.  These funds, estimated at over USD 1.4 billion annually according to the Bank of Uganda figures, are crucial for household consumption, school fees, health care, and small-scale investments. Willy Mutenza, a UK-based Ugandan entrepreneur argues that despite their economic weight, the remittance market in Africa is dominated and tightly controlled by an ecosystem of foreign players such as Western Union, WorldRemit, and MoneyGram. While they provide scale, their profits are largely repatriated, limiting domestic reinvestment and innovation. These operators, while efficient in speed and…

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About the Author

Paul Murungi is a Ugandan Business Journalist with extensive financial journalism training from institutions in South Africa, London (UK), Ghana, Tanzania, and Uganda. His coverage focuses on groundbreaking stories across the East African region with a focus on ICT, Energy, Oil and Gas, Mining, Companies, Capital and Financial markets, and the General Economy.

His body of work has contributed to policy change in private and public companies.

Paul has so far won five continental awards at the Sanlam Group Awards for Excellence in Financial Journalism in Johannesburg, South Africa, and several Uganda national journalism awards for his articles on business and technology at the ACME Awards.

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