July 19, 2022

The Nation – Digital payments boost Nigeria’s economy with $3.3b

The widespread uptake of new digital and real-time payments services in Nigeria has helped to unlock $3.2 billion of additional economic output last year, representing 0.67 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) last year.

This boost from digital payment adoption is also forecast to rise to $6 billion by 2026 (1.01per cent of the GDP, thus driving growth and financial inclusion at unprecedented levels for the largest African economy, the third Prime Time for Real-Time, published by ACI Worldwide, in partnership with GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company, and the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) released yesterday showed.

The report, however, showed that payments fraud remained high as one in four consumers in Nigeria was a victim of fraud last year. 27 per cent fell victim to a confidence trick, 14.3 per cent had their card details stolen.

The report, which tracks real-time payments volumes and growth across 53 countries – includes an economic impact study for the first time, providing a comprehensive view of the economic benefits of real-time payments for consumers, businesses, and the broader economy across 30 countries.

The report showed Nigeria as Africa’s undisputed real-time and digital payments leader. The country recorded 3.7 billion real-time transactions in 2021 – ranking sixth in the league table of the world’s most developed real-time payments markets – behind India, China, Thailand, Brazil, and South Korea. The widespread uptake of new digital and real-time payments services in Nigeria helped unlock $3.2 billion of additional economic output in 2021, representing 0.67 per cent of the country’s GDP.

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