There are indications that many Nigerians have failed to embrace the digital currency launched by the central bank a year ago. It could be recalled that recently, Nigeria’s central bank turned to the nation’s three-wheeler taxi operators to speed the adoption of the eNaira, as regulators across the world scrutinise its every move.
The apex bank offered a 5% discount to drivers and passengers of the motorised rickshaws — known locally as Keke Napep — who use the eNaira. It’s the latest attempt to kick-start the digital currency, which has so far attracted just one in 200 people in the continent’s most populous country.
Analysts say that the central bank’s focus on the digital currency is creating confusion among many Nigerians, who fail to see the difference between the government-backed eNaira and cryptocurrencies. For drivers of Keke Napep, the most popular form of transport around the gridlocked streets of Lagos and other cities, the heavy promotion of the eNaira just as authorities crack down on cryptocurrencies has them befuddled. The Central Bank of Nigeria has barred commercial banks from doing business with crypto exchanges.
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When Nigeria became the first African nation to start a central bank digital currency, or CBDC, it was partly targeting the almost 40 million people in the country without a bank account. Policymakers also hoped to take a share of Nigeria’s multibillion-dollar remittance flows and widen the country’s tax base.
The results, so far, have been disappointing. While the eNaira uses similar distributed ledger technology as bitcoin or ethereum and can be saved in digital wallets, Nigerians’ passion for cryptocurrencies doesn’t extend to the central bank offering.
Virtual currencies have lured Nigerians as a hedge against inflation and currency depreciation, but eNaira is seen as a proxy for the challenges facing the continent’s biggest economy and a symbol of distrust in the ruling elite.
CBDCs emerged amid the rise of thousands of cryptocurrencies, which are disrupting traditional payment systems and pushing central bankers to innovate to compete. The digital money aims to make payments safer, cheaper and more reliable, while giving governments in poorer nations an alternative to underdeveloped banking systems.
Although central banks typically are not aiming for universal adoption, they do need to achieve a critical mass of users, said Tommaso Mancini-Griffoli, a deputy division chief in the monetary and capital markets department at the International Monetary Fund. Authorities are targeting the “sweet spot”, as excessive CBDC usage could disrupt the flow of credit and potentially disintermediate commercial banks overnight, he said.
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The relatively low adoption up until this point, while not uncommon for countries in the early phases of launching a digital currency may be caused by insufficient incentives for commercial banks or mistargeted consumer messaging, according to John Kiff, MD of the CBDC Think Tank.
Nigeria’s central bank remains upbeat. After attracting almost a million people to its digital platform, it’s targeting eight million users by next August.
All the eNaira needs is “a little push from the government”, said Kingsley Obiora, deputy governor in charge of economic policy at the central bank.
A shortage of dollars has prompted the central bank to ration foreign exchange in the official market prompting residents to turn to the more expensive parallel market and cryptocurrencies.
Even though the central bank last year asked lenders in the West African nation not to transact with cryptocurrency exchanges, Nigeria ranked 11th in the world in adopting cryptos, according to blockchain specialist Chainalysis.
With money loaded on eNaira wallets not counting as cash on a lender’s book, banks have little incentive to market the digital currency.
Nigeria’s enthusiasm for virtual currencies partly reflects a long history of naira depreciation. Africa’s largest economy has devalued the naira about six times since 2015, and Bank of America economist Tatonga Rusike expects a further 20% weakening next year. Those concerns are compounded by record interest rates and inflation at a 17-year high.
That makes the eNaira a hard sell, particularly as it faces competition from established mobile banking apps. With money loaded on eNaira wallets not counting as cash on a lender’s book, banks also have little incentive to market the digital currency, said Babatunde Obrimah, chief operating officer of the Fintech Association of Nigeria.
At the same time, millennials and generation Z — the main cryptocurrency users — are suspicious of the central bank’s project. “They see the regulator as hostile to them and therefore have no interest in anything it introduces,” Obrimah said.
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Since August, Nigerians without bank accounts have also been able to open eNaira wallets using a mobile USSD code. Still, the government may need to provide further impetus, according to Adedeji Olowe, founder of Open Banking Nigeria.
A positive sign is that those who have adopted the eNaira are active users, according to Lipsky of the Atlantic Council. That’s the opposite of China, where hundreds of millions opened wallets during a pilot CBDC phase but with very low activity for the average user, he said.
For the moment, the eNaira continues to struggle, especially among the poorest communities it’s targeting. “Did you say eNaira? I don’t even have a bank account, let alone an eNaira account,” said Adamu Alidu, another taxi driver in Abuja. “Me, I don’t know anything about it.”
Kelechi Deca
Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry