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    Kapital FM 92.9 The Station that Rocks!

Commentary

Financial Inclusion As The Cornerstone Of Nigeria’s Economic Rebirth

todayAugust 14, 2025

Background

Financial Inclusion As The Cornerstone Of Nigeria’s Economic Rebirth

 

 

In a nation of over 200 million people, where more than 30 million Nigerians are still financially excluded, the question is no longer whether financial inclusion is necessary, it is whether we can afford to ignore it any longer.

With rising poverty, widening gender gap, and deepening regional disparities, financial inclusion is not merely an economic strategy, it is a survival imperative.

The Renewed Hope Agenda of the Tinubu-led administration seems to recognize this, but bridging the rhetorics- reality divide requires more than declarations, it demands relentless execution.

During a recent high-level national workshop on economic and financial inclusion, top government officials, technocrats, regulators, and private sector stakeholders converged to chart a path forward.

From the Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, to the CBN Governor, Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, and the Minister of Finance, Wale Edun, one message echoed consistently, no meaningful economic growth is possible if vast segments of the population remain locked out of the financial system.

Financial inclusion is about access, access to credit, insurance, savings, and payment systems that are affordable, secure, and appropriate for all Nigerians.

The numbers tell a mixed story. According to a 2023 EFinA survey, Nigeria’s financial inclusion rate improved from 68% in 2020 to 74%. That’s progress, but far from the 95% target set for the end of 2024.

More worrisome is that millions of adult Nigerians remain unbanked, particularly women and rural dwellers.

The North-South divide remains wide, and the informal sector, though accounting for 60% of GDP and 65% of employment, operates largely outside the bounds of structured finance.

The challenge is layered.

While many policies have been launched, from MSME support schemes to microfinance interventions, they often fail at the last mile.

Poor access to physical banking infrastructure, digital illiteracy, low trust in formal institutions, and cumbersome identification processes keep people out.

The launch of the AfriGo domestic card scheme is a bold attempt to localize and democratize payments.

Designed to be culturally inclusive and economically efficient, the card promises to reduce reliance on foreign payment systems and promote indigenous innovation.

Similarly, the National Identity Management Commission’s plan to roll out a General Multipurpose Card linked to NIN could be revolutionary, if done right.

Agency banking remains the strongest bridge between the banks and the excluded.

The announcement of Nigeria’s first Financial Inclusion Agent Certification Programme is therefore a welcomed development.

Standardizing agent banking, ensuring professionalism, and building trust at the grassroots level could fast-track progress where traditional models have failed.

Inclusion without credit is meaningless.

In a country where most transactions are cash-and-carry, even in the age of Jumia and Flutterwave, consumer credit can unlock purchasing power, stimulate production, and drive small business growth.

The new Nigeria Consumer Credit Corporation (CrediCorp), approved by President Tinubu, aims to accelerate access to credit for 50% of working Nigerians by 2030 but still, consumer credit is a double-edged sword.

Without adequate consumer protection, transparent disbursement processes, and robust data management systems, the initiative may collapse under the weight of defaults and distrust.

That’s why merit-based loan allocation, identity-backed lending, and the establishment of a Consumer Credit Tribunal, must be taken seriously as Nigerians are tired of government loans being treated as “national cake.”

The way forward must be multi-pronged. Invest in digital infrastructure to reach the last mile.

Launch the proposed 774 digital finance centers across all LGAS.

Integrate NIN, BVN, and credit scoring into one seamless ecosystem as well as push for 70% digital literacy by 2027.

And above all, leaving out the comfort of Abuja and Lagos, real inclusion begins in remote villages and inner-city slums.

Hope must be made tangible through mobile money agents in hard-to-reach areas, credit access for market women, identity-backed banking for artisans, and digital payments for farmers.

Financial inclusion is not a favour; it is a fundamental right in a 21st-century economy.

By Aliyu Umar, Edited By Grace Namiji

Written by: Salihu Tejumola

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