…WTO, World Financial institution push for aggressive broadband deployment
…Deputy Speaker Benjamin Kalu agrees, says lawmakers’ll guarantee Nigeria retains tempo
By Victor Ahiuma-Younger
The World Commerce Organisation, WTO, and the World Financial institution, WB, have warned that Nigeria’s weak infrastructure and regulatory gaps might stop the nation from unlocking the potential of the billion greenback digital financial system.
The WTO’s stern warning got here by way of a brand new report collectively carried out by its Secretariat and the World Financial institution, launched below the Digital Commerce for Africa mission.
The report, assessed Nigeria alongside 5 different international locations; Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Kenya, and Rwanda and recognized alternatives and challenges in constructing aggressive digital commerce techniques.
The report praised Nigeria for progress in increasing digital infrastructure, however warned that web entry stays extremely uneven, notably between city and rural areas.
Curiously, the deputy speaker of the Home of Representatives, Mr Benjamin Kalu agreed with the report, saying that increasing broadband infrastructure throughout the nook and cranny of the nation is extremely imminent, else the world would depart Nigeria behind.
Kalu mentioned: “The world has already moved on this path, and any delay dangers leaving us behind whereas others surge forward”
Based on the WTO report, “increasing fibre optic infrastructure and enhancing last-mile connectivity are essential to bridging Nigeria’s urban-rural divide and fostering a extra inclusive digital financial system and strengthening competitors within the telecommunications sector might additional drive affordability and repair high quality for shoppers and companies.”

The Digital Commerce For Africa joint mission, co-authored by Antonia Carzaniga from the WTO and Nigorakhon Sadikova and Martín Molinuevo from the World Financial institution, highlighted the central position of Nigeria’s providers sector, notably digitally delivered providers, in driving financial progress.
“Between 2019 and 2021, Nigeria’s exports of digitally delivered providers skilled sharp fluctuations, with monetary and insurance coverage providers exhibiting notable declines. Nonetheless, since 2021 exports throughout all main service sectors have grown steadily, signaling Nigeria’s rising integration into world digital markets.”
Whereas Nigeria continues to lag behind Ghana in digital commerce, the report discovered that it has outperformed a number of different ECOWAS international locations, underscoring the energy of its long-term potential.
Nigeria has undertaken necessary worldwide commitments in digital commerce. It ratified the WTO’s Commerce Facilitation Settlement, TFA, and made Common Settlement on Commerce in Providers, GATS, commitments in sectors reminiscent of telecommunications.
Additionally it is a participant in two ongoing WTO rule-making initiatives: The Settlement on Digital Commerce, which “goals to foster an enabling setting for cross-border digital commerce.”
The Funding Facilitation for Improvement Settlement, designed “to enhance the funding and enterprise local weather, making it simpler for traders in all sectors of the financial system, together with digital commerce, to function and increase.”

However the report cautioned that Nigeria has “not sure its commerce regime for different key digital trade-enabling providers, reminiscent of laptop, distribution, or postal providers,” and has “not eradicated tariffs on info expertise items below the WTO’s Data Expertise Settlement, ITA.”
On the regulatory entrance, it knowledgeable that Nigeria has taken significant steps in knowledge safety and cybersecurity, which the report described as “notably useful given the nascent nature of the nation’s digital sector.”
Lamenting that vital coverage gaps nonetheless stay, the famous that Nigeria should: “Make clear the scope of information storage and processing necessities for cross-border knowledge trade (‘knowledge sovereignty’).”, “Enhance the regulatory and institutional framework for on-line shopper rights and safety, “Implement laws on digital transactions and e-signatures.”, and “Undertake a balanced framework for platform legal responsibility to reinforce transparency and belief in digital markets.”
Whereas praising Nigeria’s reforms, the report warned of the dangers of complacency, saying: “Nigeria has the foundations to leverage digital commerce as a pillar of financial progress, nevertheless, with out pressing reforms in infrastructure, regulation and competitors, the nation dangers leaving its digital goldmine untapped.”
Delay ‘ll depart Nigeria behind in digital commerce—Kalu
In the meantime, on the sidelines of the simply concluded WTO–Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) steering committee session on the Public Discussion board 2025 in Geneva, Switzerland, Kalu spoke to Vanguard, saying that the parliament should cleared the path in lawmaking, advocacy, and oversight to drive digital transformation.
Kalu who presently represents Nigeria on the WTO–IPU Steering Committee, which offers parliamentary enter into world commerce debates and ensures lawmakers contribute on to shaping worldwide commerce coverage, mentioned: “Simply as I emphasised in my earlier speech, the theme of our dialog—centered on the position of parliament in digital commerce—will not be a mere technical footnote. It’s a actuality, a defining truth of our time. The world has already moved on this path, and any delay dangers leaving us behind whereas others surge forward.
“Commerce is not what it was. Relying solely on conventional buying and selling techniques is not going to ship the financial worth we search. Globally, {the marketplace} has gone digital, and the encouraging information is that Nigeria has already taken a number of necessary steps ahead by legal guidelines we have now handed, in addition to these presently earlier than parliament. These cowl crucial areas reminiscent of privateness safety, governance, and the non-public sector area.
“The true challenge, nevertheless, isn’t just embracing the digital area—it’s about speaking its worth to those that should use it. Africa stays an evolving continent, with a lot of our buying and selling practices nonetheless rooted in conventional techniques. To the typical cocoa or palm oil vendor, all that issues is receiving fee right into a checking account. Many haven’t but realized that digital commerce can simplify transactions, increase markets, and improve worth.
“Digital innovation is already disrupting custom, and other people have to embrace these reforms. Parliament’s position is essential right here. By making, advocating, and debating new legal guidelines, we are able to create consciousness and construct public confidence. When residents hearken to parliamentary debates—grounded in analysis and centered on important points—they start to see the advantages of coming into the digital area.
“If we wish to succeed within the African Continental Free Commerce Space, AfCFTA, synergy throughout all international locations on the continent is important. We want platforms that harmonize actions throughout the digital commerce area in order that no nation is left to function in isolation. That’s the reason I’ve proposed a legislative toolkit to observe how parliaments throughout Africa are addressing this topic. I additionally advocate stronger legislative scrutiny to make sure sound legal guidelines are made, and extra importantly, to make sure their implementation matches the velocity and urgency of current calls for.
“That is the hole we should bridge—and it’s the position parliament should play to drive digital commerce and Africa’s financial future.”
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