For decades, Africa’s informal economy has been treated as a problem to be managed rather than a market to be understood. Street vendors, small traders, transportFor decades, Africa’s informal economy has been treated as a problem to be managed rather than a market to be understood. Street vendors, small traders, transport

Africa’s Informal Economy Is Becoming Bankable

4 min read

For decades, Africa’s informal economy has been treated as a problem to be managed rather than a market to be understood. Street vendors, small traders, transport operators and micro-enterprises were often described in the language of tax leakage and regulatory gaps — activity happening outside the system rather than inside the economy.

That framing is starting to look outdated.

Across the continent, something quieter and more structural is happening: Africa’s informal economy is becoming bankable. Not because millions of businesses have suddenly formalised on paper, but because digital rails are making their activity visible, traceable and financeable.

The shift is less about paperwork and more about data.

From cash-only to data-rich

Historically, banks avoided informal businesses for a simple reason: there was nothing to measure. No accounts, no transaction history, no collateral, no credit records. Risk models had no inputs.

Today, that invisibility is fading.

Mobile money wallets, QR payments, POS devices, e-commerce platforms and digital tax systems are generating transaction trails for millions of micro and small enterprises. Every payment creates data. Every transfer builds history. Every invoice becomes a signal.

For lenders, this turns guesswork into underwriting.

A market that once looked opaque now looks quantifiable.

Fintech is doing what formalisation couldn’t

Traditional policy approaches tried to push informality into the formal sector through registration drives and compliance mandates. Progress was slow. Costs were high. Trust was limited.

Fintech is taking a different path.

Instead of forcing businesses to become formal first, platforms are embedding financial services directly into daily operations. A trader who accepts mobile payments already has a ledger. A shop that uses digital inventory tools already generates cash-flow data. A ride-hailing driver already has earnings history.

Credit can be built on behaviour rather than bureaucracy.

In effect, technology is formalising activity without demanding formal structures.

The lending opportunity is enormous

The numbers are hard to ignore. Informal and micro-enterprises account for the majority of employment in many African economies and represent a large share of urban commerce. Yet they remain dramatically underserved by banks.

As digital visibility improves, this segment becomes one of the largest untapped lending markets on the continent.

Working-capital loans, invoice financing, inventory credit and embedded insurance suddenly become viable products. Risk pricing improves. Default rates fall. Unit economics strengthen.

For fintechs and banks alike, the informal sector is no longer a social mission. It is a commercial opportunity.

Governments benefit too

The effects extend beyond finance.

When transactions move onto digital rails, tax compliance improves naturally. Revenue collection becomes more predictable. Policy design becomes data-driven rather than estimated.

At the same time, formal financial access strengthens resilience. Businesses with credit lines and savings buffers are less vulnerable to shocks, from currency swings to supply disruptions.

In short, bankability supports stability.

Risks remain — but so does momentum

The transition is not frictionless. Digital literacy gaps persist. Fraud risks grow. Regulatory frameworks struggle to keep pace. And excessive surveillance could erode trust if data governance is weak.

But the direction of travel is clear.

Every new payment terminal, every mobile wallet and every e-KYC system pulls another slice of the informal economy into measurable space. Once activity becomes measurable, capital follows.

Africa’s informal economy has never been small. It was simply unseen.

Now, it is becoming legible to lenders, investors and policymakers. And once legible, it becomes bankable.

The continent’s next wave of financial growth may not come from large corporates or headline startups. It may come from millions of small businesses that finally leave the shadows — not by changing who they are, but by becoming visible to the system.

That visibility could reshape Africa’s credit markets for a generation.

The post Africa’s Informal Economy Is Becoming Bankable appeared first on FurtherAfrica.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

XERO Price Crash: Shares Sink 16% to Three-Year Low

XERO Price Crash: Shares Sink 16% to Three-Year Low

Xero Ltd shares trade near $80.82 as of writing, down almost 16% on the session and hovering near their lowest levels since early 2023. Early trading briefly pushed
Share
Coinstats2026/02/04 16:55
YwinCap View On Whether The Gold Market Is In A Bubble

YwinCap View On Whether The Gold Market Is In A Bubble

Singapore (PinionNewswire) — In early 2026, a central question for investors and traders alike is whether the dramatic rise in gold prices represents a speculative
Share
Blocktelegraph2026/02/04 17:12
Foreigner’s Lou Gramm Revisits The Band’s Classic ‘4’ Album, Now Reissued

Foreigner’s Lou Gramm Revisits The Band’s Classic ‘4’ Album, Now Reissued

The post Foreigner’s Lou Gramm Revisits The Band’s Classic ‘4’ Album, Now Reissued appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. American-based rock band Foreigner performs onstage at the Rosemont Horizon, Rosemont, Illinois, November 8, 1981. Pictured are, from left, Mick Jones, on guitar, and vocalist Lou Gramm. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images) Getty Images Singer Lou Gramm has a vivid memory of recording the ballad “Waiting for a Girl Like You” at New York City’s Electric Lady Studio for his band Foreigner more than 40 years ago. Gramm was adding his vocals for the track in the control room on the other side of the glass when he noticed a beautiful woman walking through the door. “She sits on the sofa in front of the board,” he says. “She looked at me while I was singing. And every now and then, she had a little smile on her face. I’m not sure what that was, but it was driving me crazy. “And at the end of the song, when I’m singing the ad-libs and stuff like that, she gets up,” he continues. “She gives me a little smile and walks out of the room. And when the song ended, I would look up every now and then to see where Mick [Jones] and Mutt [Lange] were, and they were pushing buttons and turning knobs. They were not aware that she was even in the room. So when the song ended, I said, ‘Guys, who was that woman who walked in? She was beautiful.’ And they looked at each other, and they went, ‘What are you talking about? We didn’t see anything.’ But you know what? I think they put her up to it. Doesn’t that sound more like them?” “Waiting for a Girl Like You” became a massive hit in 1981 for Foreigner off their album 4, which peaked at number one on the Billboard chart for 10 weeks and…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:26