A unified and tokenised national identity system will expand access to affordable credit and eliminate exploitation of Nigerians by loan sharks, Niyi Toluwalope, chief executive officer, eTranzact Plc, said.

Toluwalope made the remark during a stakeholders’ engagement themed: “Shaping the Future of Payments: Balancing Regulation and Innovation,” where he highlighted the structural gaps in Nigeria’s credit and identity ecosystem.

According to him, predatory lending continues to flourish because many Nigerians urgently need funds during emergencies and are forced to accept loans at exorbitant and unsustainable interest rates.

“The people making money are lending to those who desperately need it now. They take loans at impossible rates because they are desperate, and then they can’t meet up,” he said.

He stressed that Nigeria must deliberately build a system that allows people with regular and identifiable income, such as security guards, drivers, and other salary earners to access legitimate credit. “Let’s create a system where anybody with regular, identifiable income can access credit, so that the emergency loan shark model naturally disintegrates,” Toluwalope said.

The eTranzact CEO described the Bank Verification Number (BVN) as Nigeria’s most reliable financial database, noting that it has matured over time and remains secure because it is closely tied to financial transactions.

“The BVN is a fantastic database. It’s matured, it’s secured, and because it’s tied to money, people pay attention to it,” he said.

However, he argued that Nigeria must go beyond BVN by strengthening and expanding the National Identification Number (NIN) framework to create a unified national identity system that links individuals to income and location.

Drawing a comparison with developed economies such as the United States, Toluwalope noted that credit systems thrive where financial footprints are fully traceable. “In the US, your social security number, credit score, title, and everything you do are tracked across the 50 states. You can’t run anywhere; it will come up,” he explained.

Toluwalope also advocated for the tokenisation of identity to eliminate repetitive Know Your Customer (KYC) processes across banks and financial institutions. “Why do I have to submit the same KYC every time I open an account? Let’s tokenise identity and secure it with OTP,” he said. He added that a system where identity data is updated automatically whenever changes occur would support credit cards, utilities, and other financial services, while strengthening trust, accountability, and financial inclusion in Nigeria.

Modestus Anaesoronye is a leading Nigerian financial journalist with over two decades of experience reporting on the insurance and pension sectors across Nigeria and West Africa. He has held key editorial positions at major national media outlets, including The Comet, The Nation, and Financial Standard, and currently serves as a Senior Financial Analyst at BusinessDay Media Ltd. A widely travelled reporter, he has covered industry developments in more than 14 countries across Africa and Asia. Anaesoronye is a multiple award-winning journalist, honoured several times as Insurance Journalist of the Year and Pension Journalist of the Year by recognised industry bodies, including PensionScope and the Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria (PenOp), among others.

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