Recently, the IMF warned the Nigerian government about citizens who are adopting crypto more than its fiat currency. It warns that if this continues, the government might lose its ability to enforce monetary policies that include inflation control, currency management, and the financial system. Nigeria accounts for roughly 60% of cryptocurrency transactions in sub-Saharan Africa.
Some people sometimes blame the IMF or say that it is against crypto because it makes such statements, but these are observations that are of facts it does not represent a favorable or anti view. An increase in adoption of crypto does lead to the reduction of the ability of governments to do the things that were written here. The question is whether that is going to be a good thing in the end or we are going to have an even worse system. History teaches us that monetary policies have always been bad and eventually lead to currency collapse, and even if they don't they make normal people lose most of the value of their money in their life. So from a personal level adoption of Bitcoin is always better.
Will the government ever find a way to make Nigerians want their currency again?
And if this continues, will it have an effect on the Nigerian government's control over monetary policy?
It is hard because the currencies right now are basically a scam on the normal people, always inflating and even inflating too much under the best cases and at bad times inflating a lot. They turned a good system into something bad, and with that I mean the governments and central banks around the world because everyone runs this model. Only a stable supply or deflationary currency could be maybe more attractive than Bitcoin in some aspects, but the chance that they will bring that is very low.
The main question is this: Why is the IMF so concerned about Nigeria?
Has it put its house in order that it is poking its nose into our affairs?
They are in everybody's affairs, don't think this is special about Nigeria just because the news this time is about Nigeria.