The IMF report states that Nigeria's US dollar stablecoins are experiencing rapid growth and are "testing" the boundaries of existing currency and regulatory frameworks. Nigeria has accounted for about 60% of stablecoin inflows into Sub-Saharan Africa since 2019. The IMF indicates that stablecoins are widely used by households and small businesses due to faster cross-border remittances, lower costs, and the devaluation of the naira, inflation, and limited access to foreign exchange. However, the widespread adoption of US dollar stablecoins could lead to "digital dollarization," weakening demand for the local currency and the transmission of monetary policy, and increasing financial integrity risks such as money laundering. The IMF believes that simply suppressing stablecoin use has limited effectiveness and that regulation should be strengthened for issuers, on-chain data monitoring should be improved, and local payment infrastructure should be developed while allowing innovation.

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BribeCoffee
· 2h ago
The IMF report is quite straightforward; Nigerian citizens are forced to use stablecoins, and who would believe in the Naira being devalued that much?
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LatencyMonk
· 3h ago
Digital dollarization sounds intimidating, but trying to suppress it really doesn’t work—better think about how to help the Naira stand on its own and get stronger.
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