⚡ Key Takeaways

World Bank data puts 71% of Algerian women and 57% of adults overall without basic transaction accounts, while Algeria ranks 22nd in Africa on women’s financial inclusion (36.5/100 in the 2025 ACET index). ANGEM’s 300-trainer network reached 27,500 promoters by end of 2025, and DZMobPay, Baridi Pay, and the National Fintech Strategy 2024-2030 are converging to make digital inclusion possible for the first time.

Bottom Line: Prototype a low-document tiered wallet distributed through ANGEM and CNAM training centers this year before bank-led initiatives crowd the category.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

Closing the women’s account gap is the largest addressable fintech opportunity in the country and a macro-economic priority.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

DZMobPay, Baridi Pay, digital KYC, and ANGEM distribution are all in place simultaneously for the first time — a window that won’t stay open indefinitely.
Key Stakeholders
Fintech founders, ANGEM, CNAM, Algérie Poste, banks, We-Fi, Ministry of Knowledge Economy
Decision Type
Strategic

Product, distribution, and regulatory choices made now shape who captures the 21-million-woman market.
Priority Level
Critical

Both for startup addressable markets and Algeria’s broader economic formalization agenda.

Quick Take: Integrate fintech onboarding into ANGEM’s 300-trainer network, launch a low-document tiered wallet built around remittances and QR acceptance, and bake in optional joint-control features that respect household dynamics rather than ignore them.

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