BSV
$70.93
Vol 130.75m
-2%
BTC
$98288
Vol 48164.77m
-0.42%
BCH
$517.61
Vol 1717.56m
-3.62%
LTC
$100.91
Vol 2608.78m
1.94%
DOGE
$0.44
Vol 25075.7m
9.55%
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The United Nations (UN), along with nonprofit loan provider Kiva, is working with the government of Sierra Leone to develop a blockchain-based identification system for the country.

According to a press release from Kiva, Sierra Leone President Julius Maada Bio announced the project at the UN General Assembly, where he said, “Sierra Leone will now modernize its Credit Reference Bureau and radically transform its financial inclusion landscape.”

The national ID system is intended to provide data on citizens in an effort to make it easier to determine credit scores. According to Kiva, 80% of citizens in the country are unbanked, and only 2,000 people are covered by the country’s credit bureau. Two major barriers to access to financial services are the lack of formal identification for many, as well as unverifiable credit histories.

Xavier Michon, of the UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), said, “Through this implementation, Sierra Leone is setting out to build one of the most advanced, secure credit bureaus. It could serve as a model for both developing and developed nations in the future.”

Kiva CEO Neville Crawley said the project “can unlock capital for the populations who need it most, allowing lenders to massively increase services and the flow of funds to the world’s unbanked.”

Implementation is planned for 2019, with the first stage expected to take three years. Blockchain transactions will be used to monitor the lending and repayment process, where a borrower, through a Kiva wallet, provides information to financial institutions upon request. According to Kiva’s FAQ page on the matter, “the system is also very low cost to operate, eliminating the type of fees that might prevent people or institutions from using other credit reports.”

Kiva was founded in 2005 in San Francisco, and has provided loans in 81 countries to 3 million people, through 1.7 million lenders, with loans totaling $1.2 billion and with a 97% repayment rate.

Recommended for you

David Case gets technical with Bitcoin masterclass coding sessions
Whether you're a coding pro or a novice, David Case's livestream sessions on the X platform are not to be...
November 21, 2024
NY Supreme Court’s ruling saves BTC miner Greenidge from closing
However, the judge also ruled that Greenidge must reapply for the permit and that the Department of Environmental Conservation has...
November 20, 2024
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement