Nigeria Approves Policy to Foster Blockchain-Based Economy

in #cryptolast year

Nigeria, one of the fastest adopters of digital assets worldwide, recently approved a national blockchain policy in order to leverage its rapid expansion while prohibiting cryptocurrency transactions.

The Federal Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy (FMCDE) developed this policy for the government. It corresponds to the seventh pillar of digital economy strategy.

Policy Objectives

Nigeria has approved a national blockchain policy, accepting and welcoming the technology underlying cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. According to tweets from government aides, this new policy does not mention cryptocurrency transactions that were banned by government in 2021.

Nigeria will establish regulatory frameworks to facilitate Nigerians developing and adopting blockchain technologies in various sectors of their economy. The National Information Technology Development Agency will lead the policy's initiatives while a multi-sectoral steering committee oversees implementation. Furthermore, Nigeria will establish a national blockchain sandbox to allow testing and piloting of this new technology.

Blockchain-enabled economies provide secure transactions, data sharing and value exchange among individuals, businesses and the government. Furthermore, it can increase transparency and efficiency across different economic sectors and boost Nigerian blockchain industry by providing legal structure for growth and job creation within this field.

Nigeria has made positive steps in supporting blockchain, yet still faces significant hurdles to its growth and adoption. These obstacles include widespread usage, lack of regulatory infrastructure and security concerns being major barriers.

Nigeria stands to lead in blockchain technology adoption across Africa and beyond, given its robust tech sector and young population. Nigeria also features export processing zones that provide favorable business conditions for foreign investment; NITDA recently collaborated with Binance to launch a blockchain scholarship scheme that will train 30,000 Nigerians about this topic.

At Wednesday's cabinet meeting, it was agreed to refund Borno N16.8 billion for road projects carried out for the government by Borno State on its behalf. Once a debt sustainability analysis is performed by Debt Management Office (DMO), that money will then be issued promissory notes due from Borno state and will eventually be payable by them.

Policy Implementation

Nigeria, one of the world's most curious nations when it comes to cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin (BTC), has approved a national blockchain policy at a meeting on May 3 of its cabinet known as the Federal Executive Council. Communications and Digital Economy Minister Isa Ali Ibrahim presented a memo outlining regulatory framework.

FMCDE announced in a statement that their National Blockchain Policy will assist with the growth and development of a blockchain economy. It will ensure secure transactions, data sharing, value exchange among individuals, businesses and government; as well as foster innovation, trust and growth throughout their nation.

FMCDE developed this policy through consultation with stakeholders from both the public and private sectors. The policy aligns with Nigeria's National Digital Economy Policy and Strategy's seventh Pillar on digital society and emerging technologies, and includes setting up a consortium for blockchain in Nigeria as well as strengthening regulatory frameworks, creating incentive programs, fostering digital identity promotion programs and increasing blockchain awareness.

Nigeria will implement its policy by creating a blockchain sandbox for testing and piloting purposes. This will enable the government to test out various blockchain apps before selecting those it thinks can successfully be deployed throughout its borders. It will also encourage the growth of an ecosystem for blockchain by offering incentives for both private and public entities to invest in its development.

Nigeria will implement some of the recommendations made in a PwC report to increase global GDP through blockchain adoption, such as increasing speed of transaction processing, strengthening security measures for cryptocurrency and blockchain systems, and providing better user experiences. Although many positive developments are taking place with regard to policy implementation, some challenges must still be met in order to maximize its benefits.

To ensure blockchain solutions are reliable, secure, and effective will require collective efforts by all stakeholders in creating policies, infrastructure, and protocols that harness its power for economic growth and improved governance in Nigeria. With successful implementation Nigeria will harness blockchain's transformative potential.

Regulatory Requirements

Nigeria's Federal Executive Council recently approved a national blockchain policy designed to boost its digital economy. This new regulation will facilitate secure transactions and data sharing among individuals, businesses and the government; create decentralized ledgers that make value exchange easier; as well as ease transactions across sectors including healthcare, transportation and supply chains.

In a tweet shared by the Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy, they announced a policy designed to increase innovation, trust, growth and prosperity for all Nigerians. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers' analysis, blockchain could add up to 1.76 trillion to global GDP by 2030.

According to the announcement, China's national blockchain policy will include initiatives for creating a consortium for blockchain development, promoting digital identity, creating business incentive plans with blockchain business model innovations, strengthening legal and regulatory framework, testing piloting facilities as well as setting up national blockchain sandbox for testing purposes. Unfortunately, however, no mention was made about cryptocurrencies as China banned crypto transactions back in 2021.

The National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), along with other government agencies and an intersectoral steering committee will implement this policy. NITDA will coordinate policy initiatives and oversee their implementation; Nigeria is betting big on blockchain as it continues its push toward becoming a cashless economy.

Nigeria's national blockchain policy will likely have a dramatic effect on its blockchain industry, creating a more transparent and efficient economy while simultaneously encouraging entrepreneurship and the creation of innovative technologies. Furthermore, this policy should help the government more closely regulate the financial sector - all which should lead to exponential growth of Nigeria's blockchain sector - which should make investors eager to enter cryptocurrency more confident that this policy is here to stay and attract even more investment dollars into their markets.

Benefits

Blockchain is a digital ledger that securely records transactions across many computers, while simultaneously sharing those records securely across many more. Transaction records cannot be altered retroactively without alteration to subsequent blocks and consensus of the network - making this technology highly secure. Blockchain could revolutionise how information is exchanged, stored and protected; The Nigerian government recently approved a national policy supporting its adoption to support their digital economy strategy - this policy will be administered by National IT Development Agency with a steering committee created to oversee implementation.

Nigeria's Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy released a memo announcing a series of initiatives intended to establish a consortium for blockchain in Nigeria, strengthen regulatory and legal frameworks, promote digital identity, create business incentive programs for blockchain businesses, foster digital literacy awareness of this technology and establish a national blockchain sandbox for testing and piloting purposes.

Nigeria's new policy underscores its intent to embrace emerging technology by mandating that all federal institutions and private sector entities use blockchain technologies. Already, the Nigerian Central Bank employs Hyperledger Fabric blockchain to power its eNaira cryptocurrency - this shows their dedication towards adopting emerging technology.

This new policy will bring benefits for both public and private sectors within a country. It allows the government to implement a blockchain-powered economy which facilitates secure transactions and data sharing among individuals, businesses and the government - leading to innovation, trust, growth and prosperity for all.

On May 3, 2023, the Federal Executive Council approved the National Blockchain Policy prepared by the Ministry of Communication and Digital Economy on May 3. Isa Pantami was available to brief journalists after President Muhammadu Buhari presided over the weekly FEC meeting held in Abuja.

This policy will facilitate Nigeria's digitization and drive economic growth by cutting red tape and increasing transparency, as well as enable government to track progress towards their digital economy goals.


The above references an opinion and is for information purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.

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@takowi It is a very step forward, that the policy Nigeria has passed a national blockchain policy, accepting and welcoming the technology underlying cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, that means that what is done globally, about cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, is going by leaps and bounds. We in Venezuela, in various regions, already have many businesses, where we are paying directly with Hivers, that is, Hive is growing. Greetings and success in your publication.