The International Monetary Fund said Nigeria's stablecoin adoption is testing the limits of existing monetary and regulatory frameworks, as households and small firms increasingly use dollar-pegged digital tokens for cross-border payments. The IMF released the assessment in a report on Tuesday. Stablecoins have gained traction in Nigeria because they allow users with a smartphone and internet access to receive remittances or make cross-border payments in minutes, often at lower cost than traditional channels, the organization stated. The average cost of sending $200 to sub-Saharan Africa remains around 9% of transaction value, well above the global average of 6%, the IMF added, citing the World Bank.
Domestic conditions accelerated the shift to stablecoins in 2023 and 2024, according to the report. A sharp depreciation of the naira, persistent inflation, and limited access to official foreign exchange pushed households and small firms toward dollar-linked assets to hedge currency risk and settle payments with overseas suppliers.
The same features that make stablecoins attractive also raise policy concerns, the IMF stated. Widespread use of U.S. dollar-denominated stablecoins can resemble a digital form of dollarization, potentially reducing demand for the local currency and weakening the transmission of domestic monetary policy, the organization said. The movement of activity from banks to digital wallets and crypto exchanges also complicates monitoring, and the speed and anonymity of some platforms can increase risks of illicit finance, including money laundering, per the report.
The IMF said these risks are not unique to Nigeria but are more pronounced given the scale of adoption. Nigeria accounts for roughly 60% of sub-Saharan Africa's stablecoin inflows since 2019, according to the IMF.
The IMF noted that attempts to suppress stablecoin use are likely to be only partly effective. A more durable approach is to allow innovation while managing risks through four priorities, the organization said. These include safeguarding monetary stability through credible domestic currency policy, strengthening oversight by clarifying treatment of stablecoin issuers and aligning with international frameworks, improving data visibility through blockchain analytics and reporting on naira-stablecoin conversions, and upgrading payment infrastructure to reduce reliance on unregulated channels.
Globally, the total supply of dollar-pegged stablecoins has exceeded $295 billion, according to The Block's data dashboard. Tether's USDT accounts for about $186.5 billion of that total, while Circle's USDC stands near $75 billion.
What did the IMF say about Nigeria's stablecoin adoption?
The International Monetary Fund said Nigeria's stablecoin adoption is testing the limits of existing monetary and regulatory frameworks. The organization released this assessment in a report on Tuesday, noting that households and small firms increasingly use dollar-pegged digital tokens for cross-border payments.
Why did stablecoin use accelerate in Nigeria in 2023 and 2024?
Domestic conditions accelerated the shift to stablecoins in 2023 and 2024. A sharp depreciation of the naira, persistent inflation, and limited access to official foreign exchange pushed households and small firms toward dollar-linked assets to hedge currency risk and settle payments with overseas suppliers, according to the IMF report.
How much of sub-Saharan Africa's stablecoin inflows does Nigeria represent?
Nigeria accounts for roughly 60% of sub-Saharan Africa's stablecoin inflows since 2019, according to the IMF.
Related News
Bitcoin Liquidity Shrinks Despite ETF Outflow Streak
Coins.ph Adds Bitcoin and Ethereum to QR Ph Network, Reaches 700,000 Merchants
mBridge cross-border CBDC platform is nearing commercial launch, with fees at half of traditional systems