Mastercard held its inaugural Africa Edge
Hosted by Mark Elliott, division president, Africa, Mastercard, the event brought together senior representatives from banks, fintech companies, telcos, regulators, and technology partners. Speakers and panelists discussed how to expand low-cost acceptance, improve interoperability, and enhance security at scale to create a more inclusive and resilient economy. With internet penetration in Africa projected to grow at 20 percent annually,
During the event, Mastercard showcased two breakthrough innovations shaping the future of digital commerce. The first-ever Agent Pay transaction in EEMEA was executed live, marking a major step toward autonomous, secure, and accessible payment experiences. In addition, Mastercard launched the Merchant Cloud, a unified platform that brings together payments, AI, and security to help merchants grow their businesses confidently in an omnichannel environment. Both innovations underscore Mastercard’s commitment to building intelligent, inclusive, and resilient payment ecosystems that power Africa’s digital transformation.
Mark Elliott, division president, Africa, Mastercard, said, “Africa Edge is a reflection of Mastercard’s long-term commitment to this continent. It is about collaboration and
Throughout the day, discussions highlighted the growing importance of payment immediacy and liquidity, with panelists noting how same-day settlement helps small businesses absorb shocks, reduce borrowing needs, and reinvest faster. South Africa’s real-time clearing system was cited as a model as Mastercard advances instant-payment
Ling Hai, president of APEMEA, Mastercard, further highlighted faster payments as critical to helping small businesses manage cash flow and grow. He emphasized that Africa’s digital future depends on simple, safe, and accessible payment solutions that work across markets and devices, calling for closer collaboration between the public and private sectors to ensure innovation benefits everyone.
Futurist John Sanei, the event’s keynote speaker, explored how human adaptability and emotional intelligence will define leadership success in an era of AI-driven change. A spotlight session with Smile ID addressed the rising threat of synthetic identities and deepfakes, highlighting how Mastercard and Smile ID are combining AI-driven liveness checks and verification to strengthen digital onboarding and reduce fraud across African markets.
Shehryar Ali, senior vice president and country manager, East Africa & Indian Ocean Islands, Mastercard, said: “East Africa has long led the world in mobile payments. We are building on that foundation by linking ecosystems like Airtel Money, MTN Momo, Mixx by Yas, and M-PESA to global payment rails and expanding secure, interoperable digital solutions that support individuals and SMEs. With 91 percent of Kenyan SMEs already using digital payments, the region continues to set the pace for Africa’s $1.5 trillion digital economy opportunity.”
The event culminated in a celebratory awards ceremony and gala dinner, recognizing outstanding contributions from Mastercard’s partners and customers across Africa who are advancing innovation and inclusion in the digital economy.
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