Nigeria’s stablecoin surge challenges monetary control
With $59 billion in crypto inflows recorded between July 2023 and June 2024, Nigeria has emerged as the epicenter of sub-Saharan Africa’s stablecoin market. This rapid adoption of dollar-pegged assets is now forcing a confrontation between grassroots financial innovation and the country’s existing monetary and regulatory frameworks.
Households and small businesses are increasingly bypassing traditional banking to settle cross-border payments and remittances using digital tokens. By leveraging smartphones and crypto exchanges, users can move capital in minutes at a fraction of the cost associated with conventional channels, where transaction fees in the region average 9%. This shift offers a lifeline during periods of intense currency volatility and naira depreciation.
However, the IMF warns that this widespread transition to dollar-backed tokens creates a de facto digital dollarization. As domestic demand for the naira wanes, the Central Bank of Nigeria faces diminishing influence over its own monetary policy. Furthermore, the migration of financial activity from regulated banks to digital wallets complicates oversight, heightening concerns regarding money laundering and systemic financial transparency.
In response, authorities are shifting from restrictive stances toward formal integration. The Virtual Asset Service Providers Regulation Bill, 2026, currently under committee review, seeks to mandate licensing for exchanges, while the central bank has launched a pilot program involving firms like KuCoin. By linking crypto transactions to tax identification records, regulators aim to modernize their surveillance capabilities without stifling the liquidity that small-scale traders rely on to sustain their operations.
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