PoS terminal – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Wed, 27 Aug 2025 10:31:17 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png PoS terminal – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 CBN Mandates Banks, Fintechs to Migrate POS Messaging to ISO 20022 System https://techeconomy.ng/cbn-mandates-banks-fintechs-to-migrate-pos-messaging-to-iso-20022-system/ https://techeconomy.ng/cbn-mandates-banks-fintechs-to-migrate-pos-messaging-to-iso-20022-system/#comments Wed, 27 Aug 2025 09:57:12 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=165954 The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has mandated all banks, Payment Solution Service Providers (PSSPs), and licensed operators within the Nigerian payment network to upgrade to the ISO 20022 messaging standard for payments and settlement, and to implement mandatory geo-tagging of payment terminals.

In a circular published on its website and signed by Rakiya Yusuf, director of the Payment System Supervision Department, the apex bank explained that the upgrade is essential to achieving Nigeria’s payments objective of ensuring standardised, high-quality data.

Referencing earlier circulars issued on July 17 and September 23, 2020, the CBN noted that all licensed operators must align with SWIFT’s global migration timelines.

All payment transaction messages exchanged domestically or internationally must be formatted in ISO 20022 in line with CBN and SWIFT specifications.

“All Institutions shall ensure complete and accurate population of mandatory data elements, including payer/payee identifiers, merchant/agent identifiers, and transaction metadata,” it reads.

The CBN has set October 31, 2025, as the deadline for full compliance.

Additionally, the regulator mandated that all existing and newly deployed payment terminals must have native geolocation services enabled, with Double-Frequency GPS receivers for reliable tracking.

Terminals must also be registered with a Payment Terminal Service Aggregator (PTSA), providing accurate latitude/longitude coordinates of merchants’s or agents’ business locations.

Operators are further required to ensure all Point of Sale (PoS) terminals and applications are duly certified by the National Central Switch to meet the prescribed standards.

Existing terminals must be geo-tagged within 60 days of this circular, while new terminals must be geo-tagged before certification and activation.

The CBN announced that compliance validation exercises will begin on October 20, 2025.

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Instant Coffee, Instant Payment and Ladder to Africa’s Economic Growth https://techeconomy.ng/instant-coffee-instant-payment-and-ladder-to-africas-economic-growth/ https://techeconomy.ng/instant-coffee-instant-payment-and-ladder-to-africas-economic-growth/#respond Tue, 03 Dec 2024 22:05:03 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=148775 I love the smell of brewed coffee but my father was a devotee. Each morning coffee aroma would waft through my nostrils, waking me, and picking me up for school.

While instant coffee comes in light brown granules, regular coffee is deep black. Father kept packs of both in his tea drawer. Instant coffee is popular because of its convenience and it contains less caffeine. Brewed coffee does not.

Like my father, you can mix instant coffee in a big mug with hot water and fly away. Regular coffee is not that simple.

Many of my older friends are die-hard-brewed coffee drinkers and they have developed palates for coffee. I have not and do not intend to do so.

However, health experts say the two types of coffee have similar benefits. One contains more caffeine. The other has less caffeine. If you consume the two in moderation, your heart will love you.

On the one hand

If you receive instant payment for services, you will smile. Like instant coffee, convenience is at the core of instant payment. A new report has corroborated this fact.

Let us check it out. The taste of the pudding lies in the number. The State of Inclusive Instant Payment System (SIIPS) 2023 reported that Africa processed 49 billion transactions in 2023.

On the other hand

In 2020, Africa’s instant payments industry, across domestic and cross-border payments, generated approximately $24 billion in revenues. $15 billion came from local payments. 47 billion individual transactions totalled over $800 billion.

In the long term

The report explores the evolution of the supply and demand of instant retail payments. It highlighted the challenges and opportunities shaping Africa’s payment landscape to equip stakeholders with the insights they need to motivate investments, partnerships, and progress toward inclusivity.

SIIPS stated that the huge number underscores a broader trend. There is a shift towards digital, fast, and efficient payments.

This is becoming a ladder to Africa’s economic growth. The report showed that there are 31 operational instant payments in 26 countries. The 27 is on its way.

The figure is growing at 37% in volume over five years. While digital payment adoption surges, barriers remain for vulnerable groups, especially women, who face security and fraud concerns.

Despite progress, no system has fully achieved inclusive access, affordability, or transparency. The report emphasized the need for collective efforts to expand instant payments in rural areas.

To ensure universal financial inclusion by the year 2030. Globally, instant payments are booming. The industry is attracting more investment than any other financial services sector. It has delivered the highest returns.

The total value transacted surged at a remarkable average annual growth rate from 2019 to 2023, reaching over $1 trillion last year. Such figures highlight Africa’s increasing reliance on digital financial systems and indicate a seismic shift in how money moves.

According to a 2022 McKinsey report, The Future of Payments in Africa, factors driving instant payment in Africa include young, urbanized consumers and strong economic fundamentals. Africa has the fastest population growth rate in the world.

It averages 2.7 per cent per year, compared with a global average of 1 per cent. Africa has the youngest median age of 20 years. Consumers in Africa are benefitting from an increase in the proliferation of alternative payment methods. Local and international fintech and telecom players are offering these methods.

GSMA said about 1.2 billion mobile money accounts existed in 2020. This is close to the population of the continent.

In sub-Saharan Africa, about $2 billion transactions occur daily. Infrastructure investments are helping to accelerate instant payments domestically and across borders.

In the short term

I do not like coffee. I am in love with instant payment. How about you?

*Rarzack Olaegbe, the co-founder/COO, eMaginations Comm. Ltd., wrote from Lagos

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Lowering Infrastructure Costs Key to Boosting Financial Inclusion In Africa https://techeconomy.ng/lowering-infrastructure-costs-key-to-boosting-financial-inclusion-in-africa/ https://techeconomy.ng/lowering-infrastructure-costs-key-to-boosting-financial-inclusion-in-africa/#comments Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:58:27 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=148165 Musa lives in a bustling city in Nigeria. He uses his smartphone daily to make payments, send money to relatives, and even save for his children’s future through a mobile banking app.

When Musa needed a loan to expand his small electronics shop, he easily applied online and received the funds within hours. His access to financial services has allowed him to grow his business, support his family, and plan for the future.

In contrast, Amina lives in a rural village in northern Ghana. Her daily life is far more constrained.

When she sells her goods at the local market, her earnings are stored in cash, leaving her vulnerable to theft or loss. She has no formal safety net if her child gets sick or her crops fail.

Amina cannot save effectively or borrow to invest in her farm without access to a bank or mobile money services.

Her financial world is limited by geography and the lack of infrastructure that connects her to the wider economy.

How AI is Transforming Financial Services
Payment cards and PoS terminal

These two lives, separated by a few hundred kilometers, illustrate Africa’s stark financial access divide. While city dwellers like Musa benefit from modern financial services, millions of rural Africans like Amina remain excluded from the formal financial system.

This gap in access is a barrier not only to individual prosperity but also to the overall economic development of the continent.

Globally, about 1.4 billion adults remain unbanked, with Africa home to a significant portion of this population.

Financial exclusion is even more pronounced in Africa, where over 60% of the adult population cannot access basic financial services such as savings, credit, or insurance.

The unbanked are often cut off from participating in the formal economy, unable to build wealth or fully engage in economic activities.

The exclusion stems from a lack of accessible financial infrastructure, insufficient literacy, and geographical barriers. For instance, in many rural parts of Africa, bank branches are scarce or non-existent, making it nearly impossible for individuals to open accounts, apply for loans, or even make basic transactions.

How Mobile Technology is Closing the Gap

In recent years, mobile technology has dramatically changed the financial landscape in Africa. Mobile money platforms like M-Pesa in Kenya and MTN Mobile Money in West Africa have made it possible for millions to transfer money, save, and even access loans and insurance services without needing a traditional bank account.

As of 2022, over 350 million people in sub-Saharan Africa were using mobile money services, representing more than 60% of the world’s mobile money transactions.

These platforms have effectively extended the reach of financial services to the previously unbanked, particularly in rural and underserved areas.

With mobile money, people can receive remittances from family members abroad, pay school fees, start small businesses, and gain access to basic health insurance.

This innovation has allowed for a more inclusive financial system, reducing barriers for those traditionally marginalized by banks.

However, while mobile players have made significant strides, the cost of infrastructure and regulatory limitations still pose challenges.

Despite the advances in mobile financial inclusion, the cost of building and maintaining infrastructure continues to leave millions excluded. In countries with vast rural populations and weak infrastructure, setting up physical banking services or even mobile money networks can be prohibitively expensive.

Network providers face high costs to extend their reach into remote areas where populations are sparse and incomes are low.

Without government subsidies or incentives, there is little business case for expanding financial services into these regions. Consequently, many are left reliant on informal financial systems, which are often insecure and inefficient.

Additionally, the digital divide exacerbates financial exclusion. Even though mobile technology is widely adopted, there is still a gap in smartphone ownership and internet access, further limiting access to more advanced financial services that require smartphones or mobile apps.

A Path Toward Broader Financial Inclusion

One potential solution to these challenges lies in white labeling. White labeling is when a product or service is created by one company but rebranded and distributed by another.

In the context of financial inclusion, white-label banking solutions can allow local trusted entities—such as cooperatives, community groups, or even telecom companies—to offer financial services without having to build the technology or infrastructure themselves.

Leveraging existing trust networks in local communities is far more effective than relying solely on large financial institutions or fintech companies to close the gap.

Instead of creating a few large companies that dominate the financial landscape, white-label services can be distributed more broadly, allowing smaller entities to reach deeper into rural areas and marginalized populations.

For example, community-based savings groups in rural areas could use a white-label mobile banking platform to offer their members savings accounts, loans, and insurance, tapping into a network that already has the trust and engagement of the local population.

This type of solution would drastically reduce the cost and complexity of providing financial services to the underserved.

Greater Access Benefits All

The economic benefits of financial inclusion are significant, both for individuals and for the economy as a whole.

For individuals, access to financial services enables savings, investment, and risk management. With the ability to save, people can build up capital over time, which they can then invest in starting businesses, buying property, or funding education.

Access to credit allows individuals and small businesses to smooth cash flow and seize growth opportunities, while insurance helps people manage risks and recover from financial shocks.

At a macroeconomic level, financial inclusion stimulates economic growth. By bringing more people into the formal economy, financial inclusion increases the flow of capital, boosts consumption, and creates jobs.

According to research by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), countries with higher levels of financial inclusion tend to have higher GDP growth rates.

A World Bank report noted that countries with broad financial inclusion enjoy lower poverty rates and less income inequality.

For Africa, where small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) contribute up to 90% of all businesses and more than 50% of employment, access to finance is essential for unlocking growth potential and driving economic development.

Furthermore, financial inclusion enhances financial stability by spreading financial risk across a broader section of the population and economy.

When more people and businesses are included in the formal financial system, the economy becomes more resilient to shocks like natural disasters or financial crises.

This is because formal financial institutions are better equipped to manage risk than informal lenders or unregulated markets.

Financial inclusion is not just a moral imperative; it’s an economic necessity. By ensuring that everyone, regardless of income or geography, has access to financial services, we can create wealth at the individual level and stimulate economic growth at the national level.

While mobile technology has made significant progress in closing the financial inclusion gap, there is still much work to be done.

High infrastructure costs and the digital divide continue to leave many excluded, but innovative solutions like white labeling offer a promising path forward.

By leveraging existing trust networks and local institutions, we can bring financial services to even the most remote corners of Africa and unlock the continent’s full economic potential.

Ultimately, greater financial inclusion will benefit not just individuals but also the broader economy, creating a virtuous cycle of growth, wealth creation, and prosperity.

*Ajibola Awojobi is the founder of BorderPal

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