IMF: Nigeria’s Dollar Stablecoin Boom Tests Monetary and Regulatory Limits
The IMF says Nigeria’s fast-growing use of dollar-pegged stablecoins is reshaping cross-border payments — and testing the limits of monetary and regulatory frameworks. Scale and why it matters - Between July 2023 and June 2024, Nigeria attracted about $59 billion in crypto-asset inflows, and since 2019 the country has accounted for roughly 60% of sub‑Saharan Africa’s stablecoin inflows. - Stablecoins are popular because they move value quickly via smartphones, digital wallets and exchanges. Users — households and small businesses — are using U.S. dollar‑pegged tokens for remittances, supplier payments and as a hedge during currency stress. That faster dollar settlement can be crucial for trade: World Bank data show sending $200 to sub‑Saharan Africa costs about 9% on average, versus a 6% global average. Policy risks the IMF flags - Dollarization risk: Broad stablecoin use, anchored to the U.S. dollar, can reduce demand for the naira and blunt monetary policy transmission — effectively a digital form of dollarization. - Monitoring and illicit finance: Moving activity from regulated banks into wallets and exchanges can make oversight harder and raise money‑laundering and illicit finance risks, especially where ID and KYC checks remain weak. - Structural pressures: Inflation, naira depreciation and limited access to official foreign exchange in 2023–24 helped fuel adoption, making these risks more visible at scale. What the IMF recommends The fund urges a balanced, practical policy response that preserves useful innovation while managing risks. Its four priorities: 1. Safeguard monetary stability and preserve the efficacy of monetary policy. 2. Strengthen oversight and set clearer rules for stablecoin issuers and platforms. 3. Improve data collection on crypto flows to inform policy. 4. Upgrade payment infrastructure to offer safer, cheaper alternatives. Regulatory moves in Nigeria Nigeria is already moving toward formal oversight: - Lawmakers advanced the Virtual Asset Service Providers Regulation Bill, 2026, which would require exchanges and other crypto operators to obtain licenses and meet compliance rules; the bill is now in committee review. - The central bank selected KuCoin and five local firms for a supervised virtual‑asset pilot. - Authorities have begun linking crypto transactions to tax identification records, signaling a shift from warnings toward direct monitoring and formal regulation. Why this matters for crypto markets Stablecoins are playing a growing role in African cross‑border trade, savings and payments. For a mobile‑first market like Nigeria, they offer real utility — lower cost, speed and dollar settlement — but raise macroeconomic and supervisory questions at scale. The IMF’s stance underscores the challenge policymakers face: enable efficient digital payments while protecting monetary sovereignty and financial integrity. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news
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