A newly published International Monetary Fund (IMF) report highlights the extraordinary scale of stablecoin usage in Nigeria, revealing the country’s dominant position in Africa’s digital asset landscape. The IMF points out that while dollar-pegged crypto assets are making cross-border payments more accessible, they also introduce fresh risks for monetary policy and regulatory oversight.
IMF researchers observe that stablecoins have matured into a meaningful cross-border payments solution for Nigeria. According to the report, between July 2023 and June 2024, the country received crypto asset inflows worth 59 billion dollars. Even more striking, since 2019, Nigeria has accounted for 60% of all stablecoin inflows to sub-Saharan Africa.
The report also states that stablecoins could enhance financial inclusion and slash the cost of cross-border money transfers, presenting a genuine alternative to traditional remittance channels. Even so, the IMF reiterates concerns over monetary sovereignty and the integrity of the financial system as stablecoin support grows.
| Category | Assessment in the report |
|---|---|
| Benefit | Cheaper cross-border payments and greater financial inclusion |
| Risk | Weakened monetary policy and regulatory blind spots |
| Regional share | 60% of sub-Saharan Africa’s stablecoin inflows since 2019 |
| Recent inflow | 59 billion dollars between July 2023 and June 2024 |
The IMF warns that dollar-pegged stablecoins could drive “digital dollarization” in Nigeria’s economy, undermining the effectiveness of local monetary policy tools. The report stresses that conventional financial surveillance systems struggle to track stablecoin transactions, making regulatory oversight a pressing vulnerability.
Citing the relative privacy of stablecoin transactions, the Fund further notes that risks associated with illicit finance may rise. As a result, the IMF discourages relying solely on restrictive policies and calls for a balanced regulatory framework to better address emerging threats.
The report emphasizes the importance of preserving monetary stability to contain the impact of digital dollarization. The IMF positively assesses recent macroeconomic reforms and tighter monetary policies initiated in Nigeria as steps in the right direction.
Other recommendations include improving data quality and investing in payment systems designed to reduce reliance on unregulated channels. The IMF believes these measures will ensure innovation can continue without causing unchecked stress on the broader financial system.
This latest advisory fits with the IMF’s repeated alerts in recent years about stablecoins. The agency continues to argue that such assets may erode central bank control and amplify financial vulnerabilities during periods of crisis.
Just last week, the IMF also called for closer monitoring of crypto use in Nepal, drawing attention to the risk of capital controls being circumvented and prompting large-scale deposit withdrawals.
The post Stabilcoin flow to Nigeria reaches 59 billion dollars! What does the IMF say about the mounting risks? appeared first on COINTURK NEWS.


