The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has officially pivoted its digital financial strategy, shifting payment systems from simple transactional utilities into tools for national poverty alleviation.
Speaking in Abuja at the unveiling of the Payments System Vision 2028, CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso declared that a highly efficient electronic payment framework is one of the most effective tools for wealth redistribution. He urged the financial services sector to treat digital infrastructure not merely as a commercial asset, but as a strategic engine for GDP expansion, job creation, and economic formalization.
The 2028 Performance Targets
The new framework sets highly aggressive, measurable targets designed to fundamentally reshape Nigeria’s financial landscape over the next two years:
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95% Financial Inclusion: The apex bank aims to integrate an additional 50 million unbanked market women, farmers, and youths into the formal economy by assigning them verified bank accounts or digital wallets tied directly to their Bank Verification Numbers (BVN).
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Curbing Cash Dominance: The CBN plans to aggressively reduce cash held outside the banking system to less than 40% of the total currency in circulation. This will be achieved by deploying rapid QR code networks and tap-to-phone systems across rural markets and transit hubs.
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Zero-Tolerance Fraud Threshold: To fortify public trust, the central bank is targeting fraud losses of less than 0.001% of total transaction values through artificial intelligence-driven anomaly detection and deeper BVN integration.
The Five Core Pillars of Progress
Dr. Muhammad Abdullahi, the CBN’s Deputy Governor for the Economic Policy Directorate, broken down the tactical execution of the vision into five foundational pillars:
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Infrastructure Modernization: Achieving unconditional, real-time interoperability between traditional commercial banks, fintech applications, and payment switches to lower transaction friction.
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Strategic Financial Inclusion: Expanding agent banking networks specifically tailored for women-led micro-enterprises and rural farming clusters.
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Fintech Innovation: Capitalizing on open banking reforms—which have already opened up over 100 licensed application programming interfaces (APIs)—while integrating blockchain and digital identity systems.
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Cross-Border Integration: Aligning Nigeria’s domestic payment networks with the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) to lower the cost of intra-African trade under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
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Cybersecurity Regulation: Mandating real-time oversight and robust risk management to protect systemic liquidity.
From Cash-Heavy to Digital Hub
Reflecting on the history of this transition, Musa Jimoh, the CBN’s Director of Payments System Policy, noted that Nigeria’s digital evolution began in 2007 with the Payment System Vision 2020. Back then, the domestic economy was choked by high banking costs, a complete lack of proximity to physical brick-and-mortar branches, and overly restrictive account-opening requirements.
By systematically breaking down these barriers over the last two decades, Nigeria has built one of the most dynamic real-time instant payment ecosystems globally. Cardoso concluded the launch by warning stakeholders that the ultimate success of the 2028 vision will not be measured by the eloquence of its policy documents, but by the tangible expansion of economic access for the nation’s most vulnerable populations.
