Empowering tradition: Tortilla makers go digital
Published: 06:09 PM,Sep 13,2024 | EDITED : 09:09 PM,Sep 13,2024
Long marginalised by the banking industry, Mexico's neighbourhood tortilla producers are cautiously embracing financial technology, in a country where cash is still king for many. v
The National Tortilla Council and technology firm Finsus have developed a mobile application that allows vendors of the staple food to charge customers using cards, QR codes or a cellphone number.
'It's revolutionising the industry,' said the organisation's president, Homero Lopez Garcia, whose ambitious goal is for 90 per cent of tortilla makers to use the app within three years.
The feedback from those who have tried it has been positive: 'They say 'I like it, I understand it',' he said. The hope is that the app will also enable tortilla producers to generate additional income by offering their clients cellphone top-up and bill payment services. For many, the app is their first link to the formal financial industry.
Only around half of Mexico's 129 million inhabitants have a bank account and most tortilla shops operate informally. Although it is still in the testing phase, the app is already making life easier for tortilla producer Abel Garcia, who has been in the business for 25 years.
The 60-year-old said that he started out using family savings after failing to get a bank loan, and now owns several stores. 'It was difficult to get credit -- very, very difficult!' Garcia said, in the working-class district of Iztapalapa. His success finally gave him access to banks, but with restrictions that put him off using them. 'That's why we tore up the checkbook,' he said.
Informal Economy
Tortillas are consumed by millions of Mexicans every day and an estimated 110,000-135,000 businesses are involved in their production, according to official and industry figures. Most of them operate in the informal economy, as do many Mexican workers.
Mexico City for example is home to around 18,000 tortilla shops, according to the national statistics institute INEGI. But only around 10 per cent of them are legally registered, figures from City Hall show.
Without access to the formal financial system, many of them prefer dealing in cash. A 2021 survey by the banking regulator CNBV found that 64 per cent of Mexicans preferred notes and coins over debit or credit cards.
Maria Adelaida Francisco, who works in a tortilla shop in Mexico City, had never used a financial application until her boss Jorge Ramirez suggested she try the new one.
Now the 40-year-old uses it to pay her electricity bill, she said. Some tortilla producers avoid banks for fear of paperwork or debts. 'They're a bit scared of the tax issue or they don't know about it,' said Ramirez, 35.
Several of his eight employees now use the application to collect their salaries. The change reflects a wider embrace of financial technology in Latin America's second-largest economy.
According to a study by the Inter-American Development Bank and the venture capital company Finnovista, Mexico is home to 20 per cent of the region's financial technology ventures, behind only Brazil.
The number of fintech startups in Latin America and the Caribbean increased more than four-fold between 2017 and 2023, to 3,069 across 26 countries, the report said.
Despite the advances, the financial inclusion of Mexico's tortilla makers is still 'zero,' Lopez Garcia, the National Tortilla Council president, said. 'The banks don't believe in the industry,' he said.
Text by Jean Arce: The writer is the AFP Correspondent in Mexico
The National Tortilla Council and technology firm Finsus have developed a mobile application that allows vendors of the staple food to charge customers using cards, QR codes or a cellphone number.
'It's revolutionising the industry,' said the organisation's president, Homero Lopez Garcia, whose ambitious goal is for 90 per cent of tortilla makers to use the app within three years.
The feedback from those who have tried it has been positive: 'They say 'I like it, I understand it',' he said. The hope is that the app will also enable tortilla producers to generate additional income by offering their clients cellphone top-up and bill payment services. For many, the app is their first link to the formal financial industry.
Only around half of Mexico's 129 million inhabitants have a bank account and most tortilla shops operate informally. Although it is still in the testing phase, the app is already making life easier for tortilla producer Abel Garcia, who has been in the business for 25 years.
The 60-year-old said that he started out using family savings after failing to get a bank loan, and now owns several stores. 'It was difficult to get credit -- very, very difficult!' Garcia said, in the working-class district of Iztapalapa. His success finally gave him access to banks, but with restrictions that put him off using them. 'That's why we tore up the checkbook,' he said.
Informal Economy
Tortillas are consumed by millions of Mexicans every day and an estimated 110,000-135,000 businesses are involved in their production, according to official and industry figures. Most of them operate in the informal economy, as do many Mexican workers.
Mexico City for example is home to around 18,000 tortilla shops, according to the national statistics institute INEGI. But only around 10 per cent of them are legally registered, figures from City Hall show.
Without access to the formal financial system, many of them prefer dealing in cash. A 2021 survey by the banking regulator CNBV found that 64 per cent of Mexicans preferred notes and coins over debit or credit cards.
Maria Adelaida Francisco, who works in a tortilla shop in Mexico City, had never used a financial application until her boss Jorge Ramirez suggested she try the new one.
Now the 40-year-old uses it to pay her electricity bill, she said. Some tortilla producers avoid banks for fear of paperwork or debts. 'They're a bit scared of the tax issue or they don't know about it,' said Ramirez, 35.
Several of his eight employees now use the application to collect their salaries. The change reflects a wider embrace of financial technology in Latin America's second-largest economy.
According to a study by the Inter-American Development Bank and the venture capital company Finnovista, Mexico is home to 20 per cent of the region's financial technology ventures, behind only Brazil.
The number of fintech startups in Latin America and the Caribbean increased more than four-fold between 2017 and 2023, to 3,069 across 26 countries, the report said.
Despite the advances, the financial inclusion of Mexico's tortilla makers is still 'zero,' Lopez Garcia, the National Tortilla Council president, said. 'The banks don't believe in the industry,' he said.
Text by Jean Arce: The writer is the AFP Correspondent in Mexico