Monday, February 16, 2026
27.2 C
Lagos

Expert: Fintech, Financial Inclusion Critical for Sustainable Growth of Nigerian Economy

A renowned economist, Dr. Biodun Adedipe, the Chief Consultant/CEO, B. Adedipe & Associates Limited, says fintech and financial inclusion are not only contemporary in the Nigerian financial ecosystem, they also hold exciting promises in the transition of the Nigerian economy from jobless growth of over two decades now, to inclusive and sustainable growth that assures shared prosperity for all stakeholders.

Adedipe added that over $2 billion were invested in fintech and startups by over 50 angel investors and venture capitalists in 2024.

Delivering the keynote paper at the 2nd Business Journal Fintech & Financial Inclusion Roundtable 2025 in Lagos, Adedipe described financial inclusion as a critical driver of economic growth and poverty alleviation.

“This makes financial inclusion critical to developing economies, especially those like Nigeria that have been experiencing jobless growth in the last 20 years thereabout and also deep in multi-dimensional poverty. The real challenge resides at the bottom of the pyramid where there is not only poor access to finance but also lack of the basic elements that define good quality of life.”

In its 2023 survey, EFInA reported 64% financial inclusion in Nigeria, driven by marginal growth in the banked population and major gains in non-bank formal adoption.

He listed the opportunities of both fintech and financial inclusion in Nigeria to include youthful and tech savvy population, increasing demand for financial services, unbanked and under-served population, significant informal economy estimated at 54% to 58% of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and necessity-based entrepreneurship, which is a rampant phenomenon in fragile economies where informal economic activities and low income are pervasive.

Adedipe said the challenges facing the Nigerian economy in terms of fintech and financial inclusion include the ability and capacity of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in promoting and regulating the two concepts effectively.

He listed past and current CBN interventions as the National Financial Inclusion Strategy, National FinTech Strategy, Strategy for Leveraging Agent Networks to Drive Women’s Financial Inclusion and Payment System Vision 2025.

Other key pitfalls to avoid are measuring, identifying and filling gaps, consumer protection and awareness, cost and affordability, technology and infrastructure.

The economist added that both regulators and operators also face significant risks – market, structural, strategic, cybersecurity and operational, as well cultural barriers and gender bias, and credit assessment and KYC.

“If Nigeria (or any developing country for that matter) will maximally benefit from financial inclusion and the deep role that fintech plays in that process, there must be a balance of interests. That balance will be effective only if all stakeholders collaborate (no one seeking to take advantage of the other) and maintain tight focus on the over-arching purpose of inclusive growth and shared prosperity.”

He said for Nigeria to have an inclusive financial system, policies, regulations, products, services, technology and infrastructure must be inclusive by design.

Other factors include integrated system, safe and efficient digital payment/finance ecosystem,

economically sustainable and commercially viable market infrastructure, robust data information system and effective regulation.

According to Remita “as Nigeria continues to embrace digital transformation and foster innovation in the financial sector, the role of fintech in empowering SMEs will only grow in significance. With a young and dynamic entrepreneurial ecosystem, the demand for fintech solutions tailored for SMEs is expected to soar, driving further innovation and competition in the market.”

 

 

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Open Alliance to FG, NASS: Conduct Population Census Ahead of 2027 Elections

Open Alliance, a coalition of civil society organisations working...

Tinubu Hails Nigeria-UAE Partnership as BUA Signs MoU with Abu Dhabi Ports, Mair Group

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the signing of...

NLNG Emerges Overall Champion at 20th Nigeria Oil & Gas Industry Games

Team NLNG celebrates being crowned overall champions at the...

Nigeria Secures Permanent Seat on the Board of African Central Bank

During the just-concluded 39th Session of the Executive Council...

Topics

South Africa: Business Insolvencies Rise by 22% over COVID-19 Pandemic

• Thanks to massive state intervention, global insolvencies decreased in...

Leadway Assurance: Insurance Company of the Year at 2025 BAFI Awards

L-R: Managing Director, Leadway Assurance, Gboyega Lesi; Publisher, BuisnessDay...

PenCom: RSA Transfer Window to Open Nov 16

The National Pension Commission (the Commission) wishes to inform...

SanlamAllianz Partners NCRIB on 2025 Empowerment Series

Dr. Abosede Adegbite, Consultant, Family Physician; Tope Adaramola, Executive...

Strategic International Communication of President Buhari’s Agenda

“Fellow Africans have become even more important publics of Nigeria's international public relations.” There is an on-going makeover of the international reputation of Nigeria since President Muhammadu Buhari came into office on May 29th. He has brought credibility to the governance of the country. The immediate implication is that the international community is now better disposed to working with Nigeria, especially with regard to enhancing security.

Banks’ Advert Spend Rose by N164m in July 2019

P+ Measurement Services, a media intelligence and audit agency...

Interswitch Secures CBN Payment Service Holding Company Licence

Interswitch Group, one of Africa’s leading financial technology and...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img