- Residents and small to medium-sized enterprises in Nigeria are increasingly turning to mobile wallets to use dollar-pegged stablecoins for cross-border payments, making this channel a core cross-border payment method in the country.
- According to the latest data disclosed by the International Monetary Fund, Nigeria received approximately $59 billion in crypto asset inflows from July 2023 to June 2024, accounting for nearly 60% of the total stablecoin inflows in Sub-Saharan Africa since 2019.
- The International Monetary Fund warns that while the large-scale adoption of stablecoins reduces cross-border settlement costs, it also increases the risk of digital dollarization in the country, weakens the effectiveness of national monetary policy transmission, and significantly complicates anti-money laundering regulations.
Stablecoin Inflows Dominate the Region
According to a research report published through official channels by the International Monetary Fund, Nigeria has consistently ranked high in the global cryptocurrency adoption index. Data shows that in the twelve months ending mid-2024, Nigeria recorded a total crypto asset inflow of $59 billion. This figure not only reflects the country's high market penetration rate but also means that since 2019, its stablecoin inflows have accounted for about 60% of the entire Sub-Saharan Africa region. This high-density capital flow indicates that decentralized assets are rapidly filling the market gap in cross-border payments against the backdrop of insufficient traditional financial infrastructure services.
Traditional Remittance Networks Face Low-Cost Channel Impact
The core reason for the large-scale shift of Nigerian residents and small to medium-sized enterprises to stablecoins is the high cost and slow settlement cycle of traditional cross-border payment channels. Stablecoins enable peer-to-peer instant settlement through smart contracts and mobile wallets, significantly reducing intermediary bank fees. If the traditional banking system fails to upgrade its cross-border infrastructure in a timely manner and reduce the costs of official channels, the country's traditional remittance and commercial payment networks may face further market share loss, leading to more compliant funds operating outside the traditional clearing system.
Digital Dollarization Hinders Monetary Policy Transmission
The International Monetary Fund points out that the widespread adoption of stablecoins among the public is fostering a phenomenon of digital dollarization. When a large amount of economic activity switches to being priced and settled in dollar-pegged stablecoins, the legal currency status of Nigeria's naira and the effectiveness of its monetary policy will be directly eroded. If the Central Bank of Nigeria cannot effectively control the rate at which stablecoins replace the local currency, its ability to regulate domestic inflation and liquidity through interest rate tools may experience diminishing returns.
Regulatory Compliance Upgrades to Address Anti-Money Laundering Challenges
With the surge in anonymous or pseudo-anonymous cross-border flows, the compliance framework for anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism is facing severe challenges. Due to the high difficulty of cross-border penetration regulation of distributed ledgers, the monitoring costs for illegal fund flows have significantly increased. In response to this situation, multilateral international organizations suggest that Nigerian authorities must accelerate the improvement of a dedicated regulatory framework for stablecoins while significantly enhancing the real-time monitoring capabilities of on-chain blockchain data.
Multi-Track Approach to Mitigate Systemic Macroeconomic Risks
To address the double-edged effects brought by stablecoins, future policy paths point towards supply-side reforms. The International Monetary Fund suggests that by consolidating the exchange rate and value stability of the local currency, the naira, the market's demand for alternative assets can be fundamentally reduced. Additionally, if Nigeria can successfully upgrade its cross-border payment infrastructure, it is expected to guide some funds back under official regulatory oversight, thereby preventing systemic financial risks while retaining the benefits of financial innovation.




