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Digital Payments in Africa: Can regulation keep up with the rapid innovation?

Cape Times

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July 18, 2025

AFRICA'S financial landscape is experiencing significant transformation, as digital payments increasingly displace cash, and emerging crypto assets challenge traditional notions of money.

- KEITH SABILIKA

Previously constrained by low banking penetration, the continent is now redefining financial inclusion, through the growth of mobile money and fintech innovation. This shift is further propelled by the increased internet and mobile phone penetration, the rise of e-commerce platforms and youthful tech-savvy population.

However, as the adoption of digital payments grows, the need for regulatory frameworks that promote innovation, protect consumers, and enhance integrity and security of the financial system has become increasingly critical.

The Digital Payments Revolution

Mobile money has changed the way people handle payments in Africa, with more than 1.1 billion registered mobile money accounts in 2024, reflecting a 19% increase from the previous year. Active accounts in 2024 rose by 13% to 286 million, demonstrating both broad adoption and growing usage.

Transaction value climbed 12% to $1.1 trillion (R19.7trl), while the number of transactions jumped 28% to 81 billion, indicating that users are making more, smaller payments, even as larger transfers persist.

This shift reflects deeper financial engagement enabled by expanding smartphone and internet access, as well as innovative mobile money services.

Africa has also emerged as one of the fastest-growing regions for crypto assets adoption, recording over $125 billion in on-chain crypto transactions in recent years, a trend that underscores the continent's shift toward cheaper, faster, and more accessible remittance alternatives.

Crypto-based remittances, including those facilitated via stablecoins and blockchain networks, are being explored to bypass the high costs and delays associated with traditional banking infrastructure.

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