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NCC Partners With CBN To Make Nigerians Financially Inclusive

By Samuel Ohwovoriole

The Executive Vice-Chairman (EVC) of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) Prof. Umar Danbatta, has revealed that the commission is collaborating with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), to make sure Nigerian government attains 80% financial inclusion for its banking population by the end of the year. 


Danbatta stated that the Federal Government’s financial inclusion strategy was to make 80 per cent of Nigerians financially inclusive.
He made this known, Thursday in Lagos, when he delivered a lecture at the 5th Annual Bullion Lecture, organised by the Centre for Financial Journalism, with the
theme, “Driving Pervasive Broadband Penetration to Deepen Digital Financial Inclusion for Nigeria’s Socio-economic Transformation”.


He said that the regulatory role of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) was in the area of driving financial inclusion while the NCC was to provide pervasive broadband infrastructure that would host these services.
The EVC further defined financial inclusion as the sustainable provision of affordable financial services that bring the poor into the formal economy.
He, however, mentioned the three key areas for consideration which were: pervasive broadband, digital financial inclusion and socio-economic transformation.
On the pervasive broadband, the EVC said that the NCC had actively involved in the actualisation of the government’s financial inclusion target of 20 per cent exclusion or 80 per cent inclusion by the year 2020.
He also advised that technology and more importantly, broadband, has to play a massive significant role to achieve an accelerated financial inclusion target that the country desires, even as the population grows.


For the digital financial inclusion, Danbatta said that digital financial services were offered through the use of mobile phones to access financial services with or without bank account and to execute financial transactions.
He explained  that mobile money, mobile insurance, mobile credit and mobile savings were all mobile financial services.


He said that the services involved the deployment of cost-saving digital means to reach currently financially-excluded and underserved populations with a range of formal financial services.
He said these were suited to their needs responsibly delivered at a cost affordable way to customers and sustainable for providers.
“Being able to have access to a transaction account becomes a first step toward broader financial inclusion since a transaction account allows people to store money, and send and receive payments.
“A transaction account serves as a gateway to other financial services. Financial access facilitates day-to-day living, and helps families and businesses plan for everything from long-term goals to unexpected emergencies.


“As account holders, people are more likely to use other financial services, such as credit and insurance, to start and expand businesses, invest in education,
“Or health, manage risks, and weather financial shocks, which can improve the overall quality of their lives,” he said.


He said that the socio-economic impact of having a sustainable financial inclusion drive was stressed in a report by Boston Consulting Group (BCG), a global management consulting firm, commissioned by Telenor, a multinational telecommunications company.
“The report clearly estimates that 1 per cent increase in financial inclusion increases the real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita by 3.6 per cent.
“Therefore, access to financial services is a crucial enabler of economic and social transformation of any country.
The lecture highlighted what NCC was doing in driving the deployment of broadband infrastructure as well as the cooperation put in place with CBN.

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