The Central Bank of Nigeria
(CBN) is set to launch the eNaira on October the 1st. Let us take a closer look
at the eNaira, what it means for you, and how you can position to take
advantage of its launch.
What is the e-Naira?
The e-Naira will be a digit
representative of the paper Naira currency issued by the Central Bank of
Nigeria. The eNaira will be a “complementary” legal tender in Nigeria, having
the same exchange value as the Naira, and maintain a “parity of value” with the
Naira. The e-Naira will not earn any interest to holders. The e-Naira is built
on a blockchain open ledger technology. Creating the eNaira on the blockchain
means you cannot have a duplicate or fake eNaira. Each eNaira note will be
unique.
Is the e-Naira a Stablecoin?
A stable coin is a
cryptocurrency backed by reserves. The keyword is reserved, but what kind of
reserves? Stable coins are backed by holding an equal equivalent of FIAT money
like the US dollar. FIAT means government-issued but usually not backed by any
commodity, e.g., gold. Thus a stable coin like USDT is tied to a currency, the
US dollar, and maintains a stable exchange value. Note, stable, not immovable.
The eNaira technically is linked to the FIAT Naira, but is the Naira stable?
Well, not exactly. To be a stable coin, the eNaira has to be tied to a currency
like the US Dollar or Euro or even the Yuan.
How safe is the e-Naira?
Think of the e-Naira in this
way; you want to send N100 to an uncle in a remote village without a bank
branch. A common practice is to buy mobile phone recharge cards of that value,
load them to your phone, and text your uncle. Your uncle can then go to any
phone card retailer and discount his N100 mobile phone credit for N95. The
mobile retailer can redeem the call credits and pay cash because he trusts the
person doing the exchange; however, he cannot tell if the mobile numbers are
real.
The eNaira is designed to solve
this verification risk by assuring all holders that each eNaira is a valid
token. This authenticity is achieved by building the eNaira on the blockchain.
Thus instead of buying phone credits, I will debit my bank account for N100,
convert to eNaira, and transfer it to my uncle. My uncle can spend the funds
directly from his phone or transfer and get cash. Every retailer is more likely
to accept the eNaira because it can’t be easily faked.
How will I get the e-Naira?
The CBN has planned a rollout
in a tiered manner; first, it will issue the e-Naira, to financial institutions
like banks. Your bank will then retail the e-Naira to you. If your transaction
value is less than N50,000 a day, you don’t need a bank account to get the
eNaira; you can use a NIN verified phone number to buy eNaira. If you want to
withdraw more than N50,000 but up to the daily limit of N1 million, then you
will need a BVN in addition to a NIN verified phone number. The CBN has very
strict ‘Know Your Customers” protocols for this process, the aim is to
assure all retailers of the safety and utility of the e-Naira.
Why should I use the e-Naira?
The eNaira has a low-cost
advantage when compared to FIAT. The daily transfers between accounts are at no
cost to the holder of the account. Lower transaction cost is a massive
incentive as traders will pay no fees for withdrawals and deposits to and from
their bank account. No transaction fees reduce the cost of commerce while
improving safety.
How will dollar remittance to e-Naira work?
The e-Naira will be integrated into
the CBN’s forex process, and this is to make it easier to receive remittances
to Nigeria. These transfers could be from the CBN crediting e-Naira directly to
the International Money Transfer Organisation (IMTO). A Nigerian abroad sending
$100 to his uncle can debit his US bank account and credit $100 to an IMTO, who
will buy eNaira from their corresponding Nigerian bank. The $100 is converted
to e-Naira instantly at a far lower transfer fee which is a real benefit and a
significant advantage the e-Naira will enjoy.
What about inflation?
The street definition of
inflation is too much cash chasing too few goods; however, not all inflation is
this simple. Coins in Nigeria are scarce; thus, most merchants round up their
prices to match with available currency, usually notes. This rounding up induces
an artificial rise in prices because any cost-push does not cause the price
hike but other factors, for example, selling eggs for N100 instead of N88. With
the e-Naira, it becomes possible to transfer the exact cash price in the
marketplace, especially in rural areas. This reduces the possibility of
“round-up inflation.”
The e-Naira can be the ECOWAS currency
The e-Naira can be used by any
two parties who can credit a Nigerian banking institution with corresponding
currency. This means a trader banking with UBA in Burkina Faso can settle his
import bills from the Gambia using e-Naira. This will be the next level of the
rollout. The financial institutions and FINTECH start to build out an ecosystem
with eNaira as the base product.
The e-Naira helps the financially excluded
The e-Naira will also bring in
the vast majority of the unbanked Nigerians who have no bank account but have a
phone into the formal financial economy. With the e-Naira, salary payments and
payments for goods and services can be concluded. A plumber can accept payments
on his phone, store them in his wallet, and make transactions with any vendor.
What are the risks?
Data security. The e-Naira is
online, the BVN and NIN information is also online, the risk of malicious actors
attempting to hack or gain access to the data is very low. The process of
minting and burning eNaira tokens by the CBN has to be top-notch.
Overall, it’s a plus to the
Nigerian economy, and it’s a positive
progression towards a cashless
society, with lower costs, and higher productivity.
Source: nairametrics
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