The difficulties of Banks in Africa

Banking in Africa is difficult. That is putting it lightly. Since the post-colonial era of Africa (1960s-1990s), when the African states got rid of their colonial masters, one of the biggest problems the countries faced was banking facilities and infrastructure for them. This is now a common problem. At one point or another most countries on the continent had financial crises, some only once off and then stabilized. For most this was an on and off recurrence with some being in financial crisis largely caused by poor banking facilities and planning even till today. cough zimbabwe cough.

Although one could very well show how many of the financial crises across the continent had major exogenous influence and involvement and that is a contributing reason. However, a very big reason itself is the banking systems in the countries. If one cannot make a bank account, send or receive money, take out a loan, or even be allowed access to specific banking services then how can an economy grow? If the people are not allowed to even store money in a safe space or receive money without questioning then how can enterprises and small businesses get the funds to grow?

To put the situation into perspective here are examples of banking troubles in Africa from both past and present:

These are just 4 examples of where the banking problems of Africa have affected the people and because of their incompetence, neglect, and failures, the economies have suffered.

Lazerpay! Decentralized and here to save the day (sort of).

I have described banking institutions have failed the African people in almost every area of the continent. Yes, to a certain degree it is not completely the banks’ fault that these various hard situations continue to come. However, it is their responsibility effectively manage them. They have shown nothing but a lack of innovation, lack of a need to improve for the people, and lack of a need to help their private and public sectors grow. This is where Lazerpay comes in to save the day. To a great extent at least.

What is Lazerpay?

Lazerpay is a decentralized cryptocurrency payment hub and platform. What does this mean? It means that Lazerpay allows users to send and receive money through cryptocurrencies. This does not just stop at the individual. Lazerpay like so many other web3-based startups on the continent is focusing on how to create booms in the small-medium enterprise sectors across the continent.

To make itself, especially appealing to businesses-both large and small scale, not only across Africa but the world, you can accept payments from customers in Lazer token (its own currency) and they will invest that amount in different assets to increase your revenue. Of course, at the moment the amount of the revenue you get back is minimal at best but as the company grows, shares grow, investments come in and more people use the Lazer token that revenue return will get larger and larger. What makes it better is Lazerpay, although funded by outside investors, is almost completely African owned and operated. All, if not almost all, of the team at Lazerpay, are African.

Origins of Lazerpay?

Lazerpay was made and is co-founded by Njoku Emmanuel. He is 19 years old. This young man is only 19 years old and has co-founded and is operating his own African startup. He has been referred to as “An African Mark Zuckerberg”. He is not Mark Zuckerberg, he is himself and he is African and does not need a western comparison. Before 19 he already worked as a blockchain developer at a British Ethereum company named Project Hydro, this being the job that made him initially drop out of university. He then resigned from that job and moved back to Africa to work for a Nigerian decentralized finance (DeFi) company called Xend Finance.

He then left Nigeria for Dubai and received contracts and other jobs from across the world before starting up his own company, Lazerpay, at 19. By starting his company he is using his Africanacity to propel the decentralized internet, blockchain technology, cryptocurrency, and all that is web3 through Africa and even the world.

                                                   (Emmanuel Njoku, 19)

To what extent can Lazerpay services replace and be better than African banking services? This is the key question that needs to be answered. For Lazerpay to be the bank substitute for the short term and for some even the long term, it needs to offer a substantial amount of services equivalent to a bank’s and perform them more efficiently than banks.

Banks on average offer:

Lazerpay offers:

As we can see Lazerpay does not offer quite a bit of the services that traditional banks offer. With that being said Lazerpay is online crypto and web3-based substitute. It naturally cannot offer the complete set of services like in-person banks.

Lazerpay is primarily for growing small and large scale businesses and the individual, to grow them does it really need to offer all the services a traditional bank does? no, it does not. For small enterprise and big businesses’ growth, in the web3 and tech spectrum, the bare minimum they require is the exact same type of functionality that Lazerpay offers.

In regards to the original problems of “banking troubles of Africa” which were listed earlier on in this article. How does Lazerpay solve those problems if it can be a banking alternative? Even if Lazerpay is made for web3 and tech-based companies in mind. It still can. Here is how:

Lazerpay is still a startup. So they are still getting funding and expanding. Their services at present are still enough to help with avoiding the banking hassle of a lot of banking systems on the continent. For them, it is only up from here on what they will add, improve or even drop. However, as it stands Lazerpay is gearing up to be an African decentralized finance giant(DeFi). It will be excellent to see how young Njoku will shape the continent through Lazerpay and maybe not just with Lazerpay? we’ll see.