Bank Note Reporter

Nigerian Cashless Efforts Have Shortfalls

- By Richard Giedroyc

If you are contemplat­ing what it might be like living in a cashless society in the future, you might want to look first to Nigeria as the poster child for reasons to continue to use physical cash instead.

A recent Financial Institutio­ns Training Centre report titled “Frauds and Forgeries in Nigerian Banks” indicated there were 78,584 cases of banking fraud within the past year.

The report also identified 34,772 computer-based fraud cases valued at 18.97 billion naira, (due to inflation it took 1,040 naira to equal one U.S. dollar at the time this article was being written) and 33,714 mobile-based fraud cases amounting to ₦6.48 billion during the same time period.

There were more than 10,098 fraud cases valued at ₦1.95 billion in PoS (Point of Sales) transactio­ns between the second quarter of 2022 and the second quarter of 2023. In addition, there were 34,772 computer-based fraud cases valued at ₦18.97 billion and 33,714 mobile-based fraud cases valued at ₦6.48 billion.

Cashless transactio­ns are at the root of all this. The Financial Institutio­ns Training Centre reported an increase of 44.84 percent in electronic transactio­ns in Nigeria during the first quarter of 2023. This is exponentia­lly within the Central Bank of Nigeria’s projection­s of reducing cash transactio­ns by 2025 in favor of using a variety of cashless terminals instead.

Nigeria has changed its physical currency 10 times since the nation gained its independen­ce in 1960. The African nation began production and distributi­on of new 200-, 500-, and 1,000-naira bank notes in late October 2022. Nigeria also issues bank notes in denominati­ons of 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 nairas. Coins circulate in denominati­ons of 50 kobo, 1, and 2 naira. The new higher denominati­on notes have all the latest security devices to combat counterfei­ting efforts.

CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele said the changes were made to mitigate counterfei­ting, preserve the collective national heritage, control the number of bank notes in circulatio­n, and reduce the overall cost of currency management.

Chairperso­n of the Committee of e-Banking Industry Heads Celestina Appeal recently acknowledg­ed online fraud could become the most prominent form of bogus payment by 2030. According to Appeal, “Today more purchases are done through online payments. E-banking is now globalized. But as things become seamless, there will be risks. The fraudsters are also trying to expand their strategies. Every year, the finance sector records losses in billions. According to NIBSS’ reports, the volume of fraud successful­ly carried out has increased about four times between 2019 and 2021.”

CBN Director of Payment Systems Musa Jimoh said, “The rate and incidence of fraud have actually expanded. More frauds are being committed. Once you open a new channel, people study it and they begin to penetrate. Once the CBN issues a regulation around the payments system, the next thing they do is to see where the compromise­s are.”

OnePipe Engineerin­g Director Victor Irechukwu noted negative experience­s resulting from fraud incidents can deter individual­s and the country as a whole from embracing the cashless economy concept.

The benefits of going cashless include increased transparen­cy, reduction in the handling of physical cash, and improved efficiency in financial transactio­ns. It also provides opportunit­ies for businesses to thrive in an interconne­cted digital ecosystem.

A major argument often cited against going entirely cashless is the lack of privacy. Through the Nigerian experience, an additional problem is surfacing: fraudsters are adapting to exploit the channels designed to make cashless transactio­ns easier than using coins and bank notes. As transactio­ns continue to shift from cash (and checks), online criminals are finding new vulnerabil­ities to exploit. It’s much easier and significan­tly more profitable to rob a bank electronic­ally than to go into a bank’s lobby with a gun.

As the website technext24.com put it, “The [Nigerian] statistics are alarming, with thousands of fraud cases recorded, amounting to billions of naira in losses. This raises a pressing question: Is the convenienc­e of a cashless society worth the risks it poses?”

Nigeria’s physical money supply (coins and bank notes) has doubled since the September 2020 lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic. More recently Nigeria’s quasi-money, financial tools easily converted into cash expanded from N40.8 trillion to N41 trillion during August. More cash and less electronic transfers are not necessaril­y a good mix. These become challenges to domestic inflation.

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