Audio By Carbonatix
Dr Ernest Addison, Governor of the Bank of Ghana, says the lack of requisite investments in African FinTechs can slow the pace of innovation on the African continent.
He said it would also slow the scalability of solutions in achieving the desired impact of a digitised Africa.
Dr Addison was speaking at the opening of the three-day 3i Africa Summit on the theme: “Unleashing the FinTech and digital economic potential of Africa.”
It captures the vision of Africa in a digital world and the essence of the collective endeavours for the next three days.
The Summit presents a unique opportunity for private and public sector stakeholders to explore, discuss, and interrogate technological advances, FinTech innovations, and financial sector policies to revamp the digital financial services industry to support Africa’s socio-economic transformation.
The Summit was organised by Bank of Ghana and Development Bank Ghana, in partnership with the Monetary Authority of Singapore through its subsidiary, Elevandi.
He said the general lack of investor visibility was a major challenge for most local FinTechs.
He said without sufficient capital, brilliant ideas, and prototypes of FinTech, startups solutions with the potential to address the diverse financial service needs would fail to progress to production.
He said the rapid evolution of technology had impacted all facets of life globally and for the financial sector, the actualisation of novel technologies in the payment ecosystem had revolutionised business transactions, reshaped customer behaviour, and redefined the nature of commerce.
"Presently, we stand on the precipice of a global digital era, especially with artificial intelligence, and there is now a sense of urgency for Africa to accelerate the digitalisation agenda through the 3is of innovation, investment, and impactful policies to boost economic growth and development."
He said as Africans, “we have an advantage in the digitisation race based on the bulging and tech savvy youthful population, the high mobile phone penetration, the consistent expansion of mobile network access coupled with the rising homegrown FinTech solutions.”
He said Micro, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (MSMEs) now had an online presence, which has enabled them to expand their market reach outside the localities of operations.
These developments, emerging from a thriving Fintech sector, are based on the conducive environment created by the widespread regulatory reforms and modernisation of payment system infrastructure, including mobile money interoperability.
Latest Stories
-
Sheikh Ali Muniru remains Volta regional Imam, says National chief Imam
8 minutes -
GoldBod CEO accuses Minority of hypocrisy over Gold-for-Reserves losses
20 minutes -
Sammy Gyamfi to address alleged losses under gold for reserves programme on Jan 5
26 minutes -
BoG–GoldBod $214m hit is design failure, not market loss – Minority
36 minutes -
Festive season sees minor fires, but domestic cases hit 15–20 daily – GNFS
37 minutes -
CLGB statement on IMF-reported losses under the Gold-For-Reserves programme (G4R)
40 minutes -
Ghanaian scientist Moses Mayonu pioneers metabolomics research on the global stage
51 minutes -
Planetech Week: Israeli Innovation Sweetens Global Tables with Cherry Tomatoes
1 hour -
Minority demands answers on Bawa-Rock Limited monopoly in GoldBod deal
1 hour -
Mahama urged to upgrade Tema General Hospital as TOR begins operations
1 hour -
Three suspects gunned down as police foil robbery on Anwiankwanta–Obuasi Highway
1 hour -
Volta REGSEC holds emergency meeting after Ho Central Mosque shooting
1 hour -
Child Online Africa raises alarm over inappropriate media exposure among Ghanaian children
1 hour -
TOR requires massive capital injection to compete with newer, more advanced refineries – COPEC
2 hours -
TOR restart could influence pump prices depending on refinery’s crude sourcing- ACEP
2 hours
