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Flutterwave Onboards eNaira for Merchants in Nigeria

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Africa’s leading fintech, Flutterwave, has announced the onboarding of Nigeria’s Central Bank Digital Currency, eNaira, onto its platform. The payment company said merchants on its platform can now accept eNaira payments.

Flutterwave offers a series of services using different methods which include bank transfer, cards and Barter by Flutterwave. The company has been adding other payment services as it grows. Earlier, fintech announced that it has secured a Switching and Processing license from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), to offer transaction switching and card processing services to customers. Other services include agency banking and payment gateway services.

Onboarding eNaira is another bold step that will likely boost the use of the digital currency. Since it was launched last October, the CBDC has struggled to gain wide adoption. The CBN governor Godwin Emefiele said last month that the eNaira had only recorded 840,000 downloads with 270,000 active wallets comprising 252,000 consumer wallets and 17,000 merchant wallets accounting for N4 billion transactions since its launch.

With this adoption, Flutterwave merchants can enable the eNaira payment option on their dashboard for their customers’ use.

“With our new adoption of eNaira as a payment method on Flutterwave, we’re enabling various payment methods to merchants and their customers to ensure everyone has access to payment solutions that work for them. Flutterwave will continue to strive to be at the forefront of innovation as we develop and implement new solutions to facilitate global payments for our customers,” Olugbenga GB Agboola,  Founder and CEO of Flutterwave, said.

By being on Flutterwave’s platform, eNaira now stands a chance of being exposed to be adopted by more merchants and users, and Flutterwave sees an opportunity to bring thousands of eNaira users to its platform.

Flutterwave provides technology, infrastructure, and services to enable global businesses, payment service providers and Pan-African banks to accept and process payments on any channel (Web, Mobile, ATM & POS). The company currently operates across Africa, Europe, North America, and other emerging markets by providing a suite of payment tools that enable over One million businesses accept payments from their customers anywhere in the world in over 150 currencies, including the Naira and eNaira.

Recently, Flutterwave took the first step to get listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Although this has come on the heels of many hurdles, including allegations of fraud and malpractices in its key markets, the $3 billion company’s recent moves, including the acquisition of licenses from the central bank, indicate that it is not bothered.

Featuring the eNaira is Flutterwave’s latest push to expand its offering as Nigerians are increasingly adopting the digital currency.

“We’re the payment solution that strives to allow individuals and businesses with various payment needs and requirements to do business, easily. The eNaira feature is important for the merchants and customers because it offers an alternative payment method that many users find seamless. It’s a key update to Flutterwave and we continue to look out for opportunities like this to improve our offering to our range of customers,” Azeez Oluwafemi, Senior Vice President, Products and Design said.

When would you organize a Tekedia Institute hangout in your city?

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Across Africa, more cities are hosting Tekedia Institute‘s Learners Hangout. We began this online, but the mission is spreading and waxing like the baobab tree, from one city to the other, independently organized by the community. When would you organize a Tekedia Institute hangout in your city?

Our impact is huge: the Bank of Industry has put more than $2 million into ventures of our members. Many have gone to raise capital by turning their Homework into companies.

We have celebrated promotions and ascensions. Just 3 weeks ago, I personally spoke with a Facebook HR  to recommend a young man who did an amazing Homework in our school. It turns out that Facebook saw the same thing and took action. As they tried to reach me, Arinze Onyeasigbulem alerted me. Today, he is a Meta (Facebook) program manager. You master the physics of business management and leadership in our school.

To all our Learners, #thank you. You look amazing on those t-shirts. Thank you.

Nigeria Missing Out On Global Oil Boom

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Following the rise in global oil prices, it is reported that Africa’s largest crude oil producer Nigeria has continued to miss out on the rare global oil boom opportunity.

Crude oil prices have for months stayed above $100 per barrel in the international market, a development rarely seen, ironically, it has not led to any positive impact on the Nigerian economy.

Unlike many oil-producing countries, this is an interesting time for them, as they are gaining excessively from the current oil boom.

Last month, the Director of Nigeria Employers Consultative Association (NECA), Mr. Wale Oyerinde, disclosed that Nigeria can’t benefit from the global surge in crude oil prices due to the burgeoning cost of subsidies on petroleum products in the country.

He further disclosed that until the country had significant alternative sources of foreign exchange and starts exporting more than they import, revenue challenges might continue to linger.

See what he said;

We acknowledge the revenue challenge currently faced by the nation. As it is well known, a major quantum of Nigeria’s foreign exchange comes from crude oil sales.

“Unfortunately, the price of crude oil is not within our control and we are not even meeting our quota of crude allotted to us by OPEC by about 600bpd.

While the price of crude went up as a result of the Russia-Ukraine war, we were not able to benefit revenue-wise because of the bourgeoning cost of subsidy of petroleum products.

“Until we have significant alternative sources of forex (non-oil), export more than we import, and reduce wastages, revenue challenges might continue for a while.”

It is disheartening that during this period when the country should be raking millions and billions of dollars from the oil boom, it continues to borrow massively in spite of what ordinarily should be a boom period for the economy and foreign exchange inflow.

The country has the challenge of having to buy petroleum products for use because it does not have functional refineries, which eats into the revenues it would have otherwise realized.

Despite its huge oil reserves, Nigeria has one of the lowest production per capita among oil-producing countries in the world, producing less than a barrel per 100 people.

Unlike its oil-rich counterparts, Nigeria seems to be lagging as other oil-producing countries are making excessive gains during this period.

Due to the global oil boom caused by the Russian-Ukraine war, Saudi Arabia is now so rich from the global oil boom that the country is planning a new futuristic city called Neom in the desert reaches along the Red Sea.

For every USD 10 rise in the price of a barrel of oil, Saudi Arabia stands to make an additional USD 40 billion a year.

Research by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) in February showed that Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are likely to see a GDP surge of 6.1% in 2022 on the back of increased oil prices, as well as fiscal surpluses for the first time since 2014.

The GCC consists of Saudi Arabia, Oman, United Arab Emirates (UAE), Kuwait, Qatar, and Bahrain. But meanwhile, Nigeria has continued to struggle to even meet her OPEC quota.

Nigeria’s 2023 Budget to Have N12.43 Trillion Deficit – Finance Minister

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Nigeria’s 2023 budget is expected to have a N12.43 trillion deficit due to import duty waivers and fuel subsidy payments, according to the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed.

The finance minister had informed the Senate Committee on Finance on Tuesday during an interactive session that the proposed N19.76 trillion budget for 2023 will be greatly undermined by the aforementioned factors, particularly, if fuel subsidy is retained throughout 2023.

The concern, which was equally expressed by revenue generating agencies, prompted the Committee Chairman, Olamilekan Adeola, to ask the minister to critically review both the projected N12.43 trillion budget deficit and N6tn tax and import duty waivers downwards before sending the proposals to the National Assembly for consideration and approval.

Adeola demanded that the minister examine the list of beneficiaries of the N6 trillion waivers for a possible downward review to N3tn, which will minimize the volume of the whole budget deficit.

“The proposed N12.43 trillion deficit for the 2023 budget and N6 Trillion waivers are very disturbing and must be critically reviewed.  Many of the beneficiaries of the waivers are not plowing accrued gains made into expected projects as far as infrastructural developments are concerned.

“The same goes for the tax credit window offered by FIRS to some companies. Billions and trillions of naira can be generated by the government as revenue if such windows are closed against beneficiaries abusing them and invariably provide required money for budget funding with fewer deficits cum borrowings.

“The Nigeria Customs Service should help in this direction by critically reviewing waivers being granted on import duties for some importers just as the FIRS should also review the tax credit window offered to some companies without corresponding corporate social services to Nigerians in terms of expected project executions like road construction,” he said.

Nigeria’s revenue shortfalls have lingered for so long due to the deficiencies in the country’s oil sector. Last month, Nigeria’s oil output dropped to 972,000 barrels per day (bpd), pushing the once largest oil producing country in Africa behind Angola and Libya, according to a report by the Organization Of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

The latest oil production drop has pushed Nigeria’s oil output far below its OPEC-stipulated 1.4 million barrels per day quota. This means that the hope of oil revenue recovery is not attainable in the short-term.

Nigeria is the only oil-producing country that has failed to cash in on the oil windfall orchestrated by the Russia-Ukraine conflict. As an oil-based economy, this has compounded the country’s economic growth as other means of revenue generation have fallen short of what is required to fund the budgets.

A key reason for Nigeria’s revenue crisis is the fuel subsidy. In 2022 alone, the subsidy is expected to gulp more than 74.07% of its capital expenditure. The federal government recently put the current daily spending on the petrol subsidy at N18.4 billion.

With the 2023 budget story sounding sadder, the N6.72 trillion mapped out for potential subsidy payment in 2023 signals that Nigeria’s capital expenditure may suffer from further revenue shortfall. Recently, revenue generating agencies have been making excuses for failed revenue remittances, indicating that the projected N12.43 trillion 2023 budget deficit may be exceeded.

“Coding” for Designing Microprocessors

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I received many LinkedIn messages from the community on how one can begin a journey into “coding” on hardware.  I had noted in a comment that my company is Intel Corp’s only authorized and certified partner in continental Africa (see Intel website https://lnkd.in/eBXEraa8 ) and we actually do a lot of coding. We have access to critical kits which Intel provides to its partners.

However, this coding is not the typical you do with Python, Java, etc. This one involves something deeper where you are programming transistors to create microprocessors which power our modern world. I have called this the “zenith of coding” as you need absolute precision on controlling electrical signals to have functional processors.

How do you account for all the signals in a processor with 10 million transistors (really primitive one)? It requires a new dimension of #coding. My team will plan something and we will explore how to expose this to people who are interested. They are super busy but we will find time.

Comment on Feedback

Comment 1: Coding microcontroller has been there for long and very sweet if you understand binary operation as to how it relate to switching. It is really easier than most people thought. You need to understand how memory, registries and stack work then you can send stream of 010101…. to a machine . I learnt C language while coding processors with MikroC language.

My Response: “Programming microcontroller has been there for long and very sweet if you understand binary operation as to how it relate to switching” – programming MCU is different from digital chip designs. You can design a whole microprocessor via coding but that is NOT  the same as programming MCUs which is what you are referring to. In my note, I lumped both together.

While when we discuss this, the first that comes to mind is the embedded electronics, but understand that making digital chips comes by writing codes. The output is extracted and sent to the foundry where the chip is fabricated. For that one, it is not easy because only few universities actually teach it. And it is very hard work. Indeed, it is a difficult work because you are working at transistor level, not at MCU level.

Comment 2: This is not a new field. There’s a whole industry around embedded systems (i.e., codes onto the microprocessors, directly accessing memory and registers). Anyone interested in this should study, C and assembly language.

My Response: You are looking at one angle. Embedded systems are one part, there is another part where you “code” design microprocessors at CMOS transistor level. For that one, it is not like programming already created microcontrollers or field programmable gate areas. In this one, you are crafting  a processor from scratch. The output is sent to a foundry where the chip is fabricated. That is the zenith of coding because it is about controlling transistors at a deeper level.

Comment 3: In the comments I have read so far [..] is almost the only person that gave a close contribution. Digital Electronics with close emphasis on a subject matter called Adders (in electronics). In Adders so many Logical manipulation goes on to achieve hard coding. Half Adder & Full Adder, the manipulation goes on to binary and quantum Adders. The logic representations helps the computer through binary numbers to be able to recognize all those A B C D and decimal stuff you type on the computer, in electronics we only know ON & OFF , 1 & 0. where ON is 1 and 0 is OFF. To be able to do transistor coding you need to be in love with electronics, Flip Flop & Registers, let me stop here.

In school we read hard acquired sufficient knowledge to transform the world only for us to be never interviewed on our core substance and no one has ever really explored us, the highest question I’ve gotten is simple circuit design. I decided to explore my intelligence once in an interview and the man on the panel decided to shut me down for driving everybody into core Electronics design, his fear for shouting stop lecturing me I still don’t know till this day.

My Response: What Jude discussed was field programmable arrays which you can program already created processors. My zenith was referring to designing microprocessors at transistor level. When you do it, you get the bits and send them to the foundry (special factor) where they are fabricated.  Unlike in the past where people used hand to craft those transistor placements, engineers “code” them. It is not an easy job and not embedded electronics.