African Banks Face GHS 320 Trillion Cross-Border Payments Opportunity
African banks must decide whether to integrate stablecoins into regulated financial systems or risk losing control over the rapidly growing GHS 320 trillion cross-border payments market by 2032. Current payment systems are slow and expensive, with Sub-Saharan Africa facing the highest charges globally.
African banks face a crucial decision regarding stablecoins and the future of cross-border payments. The global market for these payments will grow from GHS 194.6 trillion in 2024 to GHS 320.2 trillion by 2032. Banks must decide if they will integrate stablecoins into regulated systems or allow new, unregulated financial structures to dominate.
This need for change is driven by the high costs and slow speeds of existing payment systems in Africa. Sending money across borders is often expensive, slow, and unpredictable. Sub-Saharan Africa remains the most expensive region for remittances, with an average charge of 8.78% for sending GHS 200. Banks specifically charge an average of 14.55% for these transactions.
These inefficiencies significantly impact Ghana's economy and its people. High charges reduce the money households receive and squeeze profit margins for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Large companies also face difficulties like distorted pricing and problems managing working capital, all stemming from these payment bottlenecks. For example, only 35% of global cross-border retail payments settle within one hour, far below the G20's target of 75%.
Gillian Darko of BFTOnline highlights that the question is no longer if stablecoins will affect African finance, but how. Banks must choose to institutionalise stablecoins within their regulated frameworks. If they do not, this new settlement infrastructure will likely grow outside their control, reducing transparency and supervision.
The integration of stablecoins by banks could significantly reduce payment costs and increase transaction speeds. This would benefit senders and receivers of money, including families and businesses across the continent. Decision-makers in Ghana and other African nations will observe how banks respond to this technological shift. Failing to adapt could lead to a less regulated, parallel financial system that challenges the authority of established financial institutions.
The global financial world has already started adopting stablecoins as regulated settlement tools. In April 2026, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority launched a licensing system for stablecoins backed by real money. Major banks like HSBC and a Standard Chartered joint venture have already received licenses. Europe is also developing a euro-backed stablecoin structure to create a compliant market standard. These examples show a clear global trend towards integrating stablecoins into official banking systems. African decision-makers ignore these developments at their peril, as the cost of inaction will be substantial.
Source: StatsGH — Ghana's data-driven news platform