Accra, Aug. 11, GNA – Mr Romeo Bugyei, CEO of IT Consortium, has urged Central Banks in Africa to engage each other to ensure that digital currency is accessible in the sub-region for smooth trade facilitation.
He said with cross-border payments, there was a need for serious engagement to create convenience and reduce the cost of operations.
Mr Bugyei made the call at MTN Ghana’s Stakeholder Forum on the Impact of Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) or digital Cedi on Future Digital Payments in Accra. The Forum formed part of the MTN MoMo Month celebration.
The Bank of Ghana together with its partners has conducted a pilot on the digital Cedi in a trial phase
with banks, payment service providers, merchants, consumers, and other relevant stakeholders
The digital Cedi, or ‘e-Cedi’, is intended to complement and serve as a digital alternative to physical cash, thus driving the Ghanaian cashlite agenda through the promotion of diverse digital payments, while ensuring a secure and robust payment infrastructure in Ghana.
It also aims to facilitate payments without a bank account, contract, or smartphone, by so doing
boosting the use of digital services and financial inclusion amongst all demographic groups.
“It will make the sub-region closer to each other and trade facilitation easier for businesses,” he said.
He said when these engagements and arrangements were done, it would improve cross-border payments and invariably promote intra-trade.
He said with the CBDC it would bring stability and trust into the digital currency space and
address some of the challenges in the fintech space.
Mr Clarence Blay, Assistant Director, Fintech, and Innovation at the Bank of Ghana said the digital currency had been built on the advances in the sector, which would promote inclusiveness, and positive disruption to the financial service landscape, leveraging the capabilities of FSPs, and interoperability.
He said the Central Bank would depend on the existing digital payments architecture to roll out
digital currency, adding that unlike mobile money and other digital wallets, the currency allows both online and offline transactions.
He said the digital currency would deepen financial inclusion because during the design of the CBDC there was inclusiveness at all levels.
“We are trying to preserve the existing financial service architecture through positive disruptions,” he added.
The Director said there were many expected benefits of the CBDC, which include enhanced efficiency of interoperability, improved access to liquidity, boost payment efficiency and reduced transaction cost.
Other benefits are promoting trust in digital payments, improvement in fraud management and scaling up of innovation of DFS.
Mr Eli Hini, the CEO of Mobile Money Limited at MTN Ghana, said digital currencies have become an important tool for transactions all over the world due
to the opportunities they present.
He said there was the need to address a lot of the issues that were associated with cyber security challenges, adding that in all these discussions there were always potential risks, which needed to be recognized and addressed.
Madam Martha Acquaye, Head of Digital and Inclusive Banking at Cal Bank, called on the Central Bank to make it convenient for customers to use digital currency.
She urged stakeholders to collaborate more to enable the platform to work while reducing the transportation of cash.
She also called on the Central Bank to create more education around the platform to create awareness of its adoption.
GNA