Niger will join three other African countries - the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Zambia and Rwanda - where the company is already offering the service through Airtel Money. Through this, customers can transfer money, facilitate remittances, the company said in a statement.
Airtel Money has over 37,000 active Airtel Money agents and over 10 million registered customers across the four countries to support the money transfer service.
In addition to these countries, mobile money customers in Ivory Coast and Benin will be able to send money to and from Niger through a partnership between Airtel and MTN.
The average fee to remit money in Africa, anywhere between 12-20 per cent, is the highest in the world, as per Overseas Development Institute.
The World Bank recently reported that an additional USD 4 billion could go into the hands of Africans if international remittance fees fell to 5 per cent of G8 average, thereby adding further to the positive social and economic impact of remittances as a source of income.