The largest economy in Africa has a foreign investment problem despite the exponential growth in crypto adoption.
The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported on Tuesday that foreign direct investment (FDI) in Nigeria, the largest economy in Africa, dropped by 33% last year due to a severe shortage of dollars, which discouraged crypto companies from expanding into the country. In 2022, investment declined to $468 million from the previous year's $698 million. According to the data, FDI has decreased by approximately 90% since its peak of $4.7 billion in 2008.
The adoption of crypto in Nigeria has grown at an exponential rate. The country currently has more active adult crypto traders, as a lot of citizens now prefer to store their money in digital currencies over fiat cash, due to the constant devaluation of the naira. In Chainalysis’ 2020 Cryptocurrency Geography Report, Nigeria ranked eighth in crypto adoption and usage rate among 154 countries included in the study. This adoption rate is expected to have encouraged more foreign crypto investment in the nation but the reverse is the case.
In an interview with a local data analyst and crypto enthusiast, Obinna Uzoije, he stated that the low rate of foreign investment in Nigeria could be attributed to the fact that the use of cryptocurrency was yet to go mainstream in the country. Uzoije explained that the lack of use of crypto in day-to-day economic activities and the ban on financial institutions from servicing crypto exchanges were to be blamed for the low investment rate.
As part of the 2021 ban, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) directed all commercial banks to close accounts belonging to crypto exchanges and other businesses transacting in cryptocurrencies in the
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