When Naif AbuSaida, the founder of Saudi Arabia-based FinTech Hakbah, first came up with the idea for a social savings app, his aim was to modernise one of the world’s <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/weekend/2023/03/10/can-you-train-your-brain-to-save-more-money/" target="_blank">oldest saving methods </a>and <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/10/11/how-fintech-has-unlocked-new-financial-opportunities-for-millions/" target="_blank">strengthen financial inclusion </a>in the kingdom. But it took a health crisis to spur him into action, forcing him to take a <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2023/04/14/why-it-is-important-for-women-to-build-a-financial-legacy/" target="_blank">step back and evaluate his legacy </a>– not only to his family, but also to society. “In 2017, I got diagnosed with colon cancer, stage three, but I recovered,” the former banker says. “When you have to cancel all your life, you evaluate everything and two things I was thinking about is what will I leave for my family and what is my legacy? What is the impact I had in the community, or society?” “So during the chemotherapy, I decided to start a FinTech company.” Social savings is an informal “money pool”, in which family, friends and colleagues contribute regularly to a collective fund that allows them to take turns to borrow what has been saved by the group. Also <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/07/08/what-is-a-savings-circle-and-how-can-it-help-your-money-goals/">known as a savings circle</a> or chit fund, it is an <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/economy/saudi-central-bank-sets-minimum-capital-limit-for-microfinance-firms-1.949500" target="_blank">ancient savings system that is popular </a>in Saudi Arabia, India, China, Africa and Latin America, particularly for underbanked or unbanked communities. The funds are typically used for anything from paying rent to bills and school fees or even financing a small business. Perhaps one of the most famous people to have used a family savings circle to fund their business is Berry Gordy, the founder of Motown Records. Mr Gordy borrowed $800 from his family's savings group in 1959 – and went on to sell the label in 1988 for $61 million. The global acceleration of FinTech and digital payment solutions since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic has <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/05/19/robo-advisers-democratise-investing-and-promote-financial-inclusion-experts-say/">unlocked new financial opportunities </a>for millions of people who previously did not have <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/06/27/generation-start-up-how-pyypl-helps-the-unbanked-take-control-of-their-money/">access to bank accounts</a>, the World Bank said in its Global Findex 2021 report. About 22 per cent of the GCC's population is unbanked, compared with 60 per cent in North Africa, according to a report by consultancy Strategy&. Up to 79 per cent of young adults in the Mena region are unbanked and 72 per cent of the poorest citizens can benefit from financial inclusion, the Arab Monetary Fund said in a report. Meanwhile, economic headwinds including high global inflation, the cost of living crisis and rising interest rates have made it more difficult for people to save consistently. Increasing household savings in Saudi Arabia, the Arab world’s biggest economy, is a key priority under the kingdom’s Vision 2030 plan, which aims to diversify the economy away from hydrocarbons. Saudi Arabia also launched the Financial Sector Development Programme (FSDP) as part of its Vision 2030 plan to help diversify the country’s financial sector and boost household savings. While investment is recognised as a goal of economic policy as it improves productivity and increases the competitiveness of an economy, savings form the core of capital formation that fuels economic development, consultancy KPMG says in its <i>Analysis of Household Savings in Saudi Arabia</i> report. “Nations that take conscious initiatives to encourage and nurture formal savings are more likely to witness higher levels of sustainable economic growth, human development and living standards,” KPMG adds. “Introducing policy initiatives, driven by behavioural characteristics of households, increasing [Saudi Arabia’s] financial literacy to boost savings, enabling easy access to financial products and services by emphasising financial inclusion, and increasing the frequency of data published on household savings are some of the areas that can be focused upon to improve the country’s household savings rate.” Up to 70 per cent of<b> </b>people in Saudi Arabia do not have an emergency savings fund, while the household savings rate averages about 1.6 per cent, according to Mr AbuSaida. “They know it is important but they cannot [save]. It will not change unless you make saving easier,” Mr AbuSaida says. “This is what we did at Hakbah; we did it in a very simple but smart way by digitalising the habit of savings.” Founded in 2018 and launched in 2020, Hakbah has grown into one of the fastest-growing start-ups in the region, Mr AbuSaida says. It now has more than 120,000 registered users representing a range of nationalities, including Saudis, Burmese, Thai, Afghan and Pakistanis, among others, he adds. More than 3,300 savings groups, called Jamiya, have been created on the platform, while it has helped 18,000 of its customers to save more than $35 million combined, Mr AbuSaida says. When users sign up to the platform, they create their own Jamiya and invite trusted family and friends to join the savings group, which includes the amount of money they aim to save. The app is only available to citizens and residents of Saudi Arabia. Hakbah is permitted by the Saudi Central Bank to test its services under the Regulatory Sandbox environment, while it graduated from the Dubai International Financial Centre FinTech Hive Accelerator Programme in 2019. Initially bootstrapped by Mr AbuSaida, Hakbah in April closed a $2 million pre-Series A funding round led by Dubai-based venture capital company Global Ventures and Aditum Investment Management, which is based in the Dubai International Finance Centre. Since Mr AbuSaida founded the company five years ago, it has raised a total of $3.7 million. The proceeds will be used to accelerate Hakbah’s presence in Saudi Arabia, improve the user journey and enhance its savings engine algorithm, he says. “Savings are an important pillar of the Financial Sector Development Programme and increasing them is a key focus for Saudi Vision 2030,” Mr AbuSaida said in April after the company received its first injection of institutional capital. “Hakbah will play a key role in supporting this goal by widening its savings offering and partnerships for employees, gig-workers, students, housewives, and many others.” The powerful combination of Hakbah’s exceptional user experience, sophisticated back-end technology and partnerships with leading regional brands will empower millions of users to meet their savings goals, Lachlan Hughes, head of Venture Capital at Aditum Investment Management, said in April. “We are thrilled to partner with Hakbah in their mission to drive financial inclusion and promote savings in the Gulf region,” Mr Huges said. “We are impressed with Naif's vision and leadership and look forward to supporting Hakbah as they continue to scale and make a meaningful impact in the region.” Hakbah’s business model was originally based on a $6 monthly subscription fee, but Mr AbuSaida says this has changed to a one-off charge for users to join the platform. “We changed it for one reason: psychologically, when people pay every month to save, they feel they are losing money,” he says. Mr AbuSaida plans to continue focusing on Saudi Arabia and is “not obsessed” with expanding to other countries within the GCC in the near future. “I graduated from the FinTech Hive Accelerator Programme and the GCC was in the business plan for 2025-2026, but Saudi is still the biggest market,” he says. “Unless something changes, we have agility … and our savings engine allows us to connect with any financial institution and bank in Saudi or outside, but I'm not obsessed to expand.” A few come to mind, including Chime, a US banking app, Revolut and Plaid, which allows apps to connect with their customer's bank accounts. I admire several businessmen and pioneers like Chris Britt, the founder and chief executive of Chime, David Velez, who founded Nubank, Zach Perret, co-founder of Plaid, and Anne Boden, the founder of the UK's Starling Bank. Since launching Hakbah in 2018, I have learnt a couple of new skills, namely resilience and how to remain super focused. Solving another challenge for the good of society. One of our challenges has been finding the right talent for Hakbah. That said, I wish we'd selected the team faster and also moved faster on partnerships.