₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,329,399 members, 8,440,416 topics. Date: Monday, 06 July 2026 at 11:58 PM

Toggle theme

Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates - Business - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralBusinessDigital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates (10045 Views)

1 2 Reply (Go Down)

Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Josepholome(op): 7:31pm On Oct 23, 2025
Nigeria’s Digital Extraction Problem: How Firms Like Optasia Profit from Nigerians Without Building Nigerian Wealth — and How to Fix It

A quiet digital drain is underway in Africa’s largest economy. A new generation of foreign “AI–fintech” vendors is monetising Nigerian consumers at vast scale, offering airtime advances, nano-loans, and algorithmic credit scoring through the country’s mobile networks. Optasia, formerly Channel VAS, exemplifies this model. It provides airtime and data credit services for telecom giants such as MTN and reportedly serves over 121 million monthly active users worldwide, processing tens of millions of micro-loans each day. Now, as the company seeks to raise roughly ZAR 6.3 billion, or about $375 million, through a public offering, much of its valuation rests on African—and especially Nigerian—transaction volumes. Yet the intellectual property, cloud infrastructure, and retained earnings all sit offshore. Nigeria provides the demand, the data, and the distribution rails; others reap the equity value.

Without deliberate policy intervention, the country is exporting value and importing dependency.
The mechanics of this extraction are straightforward but deeply consequential. These firms integrate directly with mobile network operators, mining subscriber data such as call logs, recharge patterns, data consumption, and repayment history to price nano-loans dynamically. They take a revenue share from every disbursed loan or airtime advance, yet the algorithms and data models that enable this system reside abroad while Nigerian users supply the behavioural fuel. Meanwhile, many of these companies operate through foreign parent entities, routing fees offshore under the guise of “technology services” or “licensing” payments.

This reduces local taxable income and deprives the Nigerian state of much-needed revenue. The rules that might address this—such as those governing Significant Economic Presence and transfer pricing—exist, but enforcement is inconsistent and often too slow to keep pace with the speed of digital innovation.

Even where these firms establish Nigerian subsidiaries, the local presence is minimal. Most employ only small teams handling sales, compliance, and customer operations. The high-value activities—research, data science, platform engineering—remain anchored abroad. The result is a digital ecosystem that extracts more than it contributes, providing few skilled jobs and almost no technology transfer or capital-market participation. Nigerians bear the credit risk and pay the fees, while foreign platforms capture the profits and, more importantly, the compounding equity value that global investors reward.

What Nigeria currently captures from this digital economy is a fraction of its potential. Taxation frameworks theoretically allow the country to tax non-resident firms and enforce transfer-pricing compliance, but profit shifting through intra-group service fees continues to erode the base. Consumer-protection regulations, such as the FCCPC’s digital-lending rules, focus narrowly on abusive lending practices without addressing broader questions of value capture, data localisation, or intellectual property retention.

The Nigeria Data Protection Act of 2023 and the NITDA content guidelines provide a foundation for data governance, yet compliance remains uneven, particularly among telco-adjacent fintechs. Nigerians generate the data and pay the fees; others own the servers and the equity.

Other emerging markets have faced—and fixed—this imbalance. India’s central bank requires loans to be originated by regulated domestic entities and insists that financial data be processed within its borders. Indonesia’s financial regulator caps foreign ownership in peer-to-peer lending platforms and mandates local incorporation.

These policies are not protectionist but pragmatic: they invite foreign participation on terms that ensure domestic value creation. Market access, in other words, must come with national benefit.

Nigeria can achieve a similar balance. Policymakers should create a joint NCC–CBN licence category for telco-embedded credit and airtime advance services, ensuring that any firm offering such products operates through a locally incorporated and regulated entity. Data processing for Nigerian subscribers should occur within the country’s borders, using cloud environments that comply with national data-protection laws. Foreign firms seeking to profit from Nigerian users should hold a meaningful level of domestic equity, while intellectual property relevant to local operations should be escrowed within Nigerian jurisdiction for continuity and oversight. Companies should be required to disclose their Nigerian revenues, the share of data processed locally, and the scale of their investment in domestic R&grin.

Telecom contracts should be transparent and non-exclusive, ensuring that consumers, not just corporate intermediaries, share in the benefits. Enforcement of tax obligations should be strengthened through coordinated audits by the Federal Inland Revenue Service, the Central Bank, and the Nigerian Communications Commission. And when these firms list abroad, they should be required to offer Nigerian investors participation through depositary receipts or equivalent vehicles, ensuring that the country’s capital markets capture some of the upside generated by its consumers.

Optasia’s planned public offering crystallises a wider problem: Nigeria’s digital demand is enriching global shareholders rather than Nigerian citizens. The country already has the legal and regulatory architecture to prevent this outcome—the NDPA, the NITDA content rules, the Significant Economic Presence framework—but it lacks coordinated enforcement. The solution lies not in rejecting foreign technology but in insisting that those who profit from Nigerian scale also invest in Nigerian capability. Market openness must be matched by value reciprocity.

The next six months are critical. Regulators should issue a joint NCC–CBN notice of intent to formalise licensing for telco-embedded credit services, direct mobile operators to disclose and revise exclusivity arrangements, and clarify how inter-company platform fees are treated under existing tax rules. NITDA should enforce compliance on data residency and model training, while the Ministry of Finance and the Securities and Exchange Commission work together to enable Nigerian depositary participation in offshore listings linked to local operations.

Nigeria need not close its digital borders to reclaim value. What it must do is renegotiate the terms of participation. If foreign firms wish to monetise Nigeria’s data and demand, the price of admission must be measured in jobs, taxes, skills, intellectual property, and shared capital-market inclusion.

To remain open without being exploited, Nigeria must ensure that the digital wealth created within its borders stays, at least in part, within them. Market access should no longer be a one-way street. If others seek Nigeria’s scale, they must also help build Nigeria’s wealth.
https://leaders.ng/2025/10/23/digital-extraction-in-nigeria-how-tech-giants-earn-big-while-local-wealth-stagnates/

Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Kelvinnchucks(m): 8:06pm On Oct 23, 2025
let me not lie... in this current economy nobody will read that till the end.

I was expecting moniepont tho... anyone that can summarize please tag me
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by 900warriorz: 8:08pm On Oct 23, 2025
Little wonder why businesses are failing and the economy is collapsing..

The next century is a digital one. If you are not prepared, you'd be left out completely
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by GiftAbia1: 8:08pm On Oct 23, 2025
The guy above is sincerely correct. Who have the time to read that long epistle
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by 1Alex: 8:10pm On Oct 23, 2025
Here’s a plain-language summary of the article:

Foreign tech and finance companies are quietly making big money from Nigerians through airtime loans, small cash loans, and other mobile-based credit services. One example is a company called **Optasia**, which works with major phone networks like **MTN** to offer these services to millions of Nigerians.

The problem? Almost all the real profits, data, and technology are kept **outside Nigeria**. The companies run their servers abroad, pay little tax locally, and employ only a few Nigerians for basic roles. Meanwhile, Nigerian consumers provide the usage data, take on the credit risks, and pay the fees — but foreign investors get the rewards.

Even though Nigeria has laws that could prevent this (like data protection and tax rules), they’re not properly enforced. This means the country is **exporting digital wealth** while getting very little in return.

Other countries, like India and Indonesia, have already fixed this by forcing foreign companies to operate through **local subsidiaries**, process data **inside the country**, and share ownership with **local investors**.

The article argues that Nigeria should do the same. Regulators should:

* Make sure any company offering mobile credit is **licensed and based in Nigeria**.
* Require that **data from Nigerians stays in Nigeria**.
* Ensure foreign firms **pay taxes and invest locally**.
* Let **Nigerian investors share in the profits** when these firms go public abroad.

In short: Nigeria’s digital economy is growing fast, but the value is flowing out of the country. To stop being exploited, Nigeria must **set fair rules** so that the data, profits, and opportunities created by Nigerians also benefit Nigerians.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by SpaceX: 8:10pm On Oct 23, 2025
Kelvinnchucks:
let me not lie... in this current economy nobody will read that till the end.

I was expecting moniepont tho... anyone that can summarize please tag me
Summary

How tech giant earn big!!!!
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by DeJoeee(m): 8:13pm On Oct 23, 2025
I didnt bother to read the long epistle but any attack on Opay is an attack on hard working Nigerian business men and women and must be resisted.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by fabolouz1(m): 8:16pm On Oct 23, 2025
NITDA in conjunction with CISCO is organizing free online cyber security training for Nigerians.
Application ends on Oct.31st.
Google for more info.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by WhizdomXX(m): 8:16pm On Oct 23, 2025
Nice read. NCC can do better.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by kenny714433(m): 8:17pm On Oct 23, 2025
"Yet the intellectual property, cloud infrastructure, and retained earnings all sit offshore"

So were you expecting them to transfer to you their intellectual property?

So we have cloud storage facility in Nigeria? Do we even have 24/7 electricity to support that?

Were you expecting them to share their hard earned earnings with you?

Apart from supporting corrupt politicians, what else do we know how to do best?
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by grandstar(m): 8:18pm On Oct 23, 2025
I am a firm supporter of the free market.

Let global best practices dictate things, and not armtwist foreign firms to set up subsidiaries here.

If there are opportunities, Nigerians should set up companies to exploit them, and many are already doing so such as Flutterwave.

Many of these Nigerian founded Co.panies are still domiciled abroad as the country lacks the brand name and venture capital to make them thrive

Which Anerican would feel safe dealing with a Nigerian based Fintech?
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by SmartPolician:
fabolouz1:
NITDA in conjunction with CISCO is organizing free online cyber security training for Nigerians.
Application ends on Oct.31st.
Google for more info.
Don't mind NITDA. That course is always FREE on Cisco Networking Academy - Cyber Threat Management, I suppose.

You can sign up on that platform and learn courses and get certificates after doing practicals and passing exams. It has nothing to do with NITDA.

Cisco Networking Academy has a powerful Ethical Hacker course. You should do that one.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Oxygen1998: 8:23pm On Oct 23, 2025
That's why you'd always remain at your level
GiftAbia1:
The guy above is sincerely correct. Who have the time to read that long epistle
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by SmartyPants(m): 8:24pm On Oct 23, 2025
The only effect of this article will be to promote Optasia.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by WhizdomXX(m): 8:26pm On Oct 23, 2025
Okay. Just call out Moniepoint, Palmpay and Opay. You made a mistake with the R&grin putting R& grin
Kelvinnchucks:
let me not lie... in this current economy nobody will read that till the end.

I was expecting moniepont tho... anyone that can summarize please tag me
I did bro.
GiftAbia1:
The guy above is sincerely correct. Who have the time to read that long epistle
We all do (need to learn how to stop generalizing).
SmartyPants:
The only effect of this article will be to promote Optasia.
Far from it. If it gets to the Minister of Communications and Digital economy.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by dfrost: 8:28pm On Oct 23, 2025
Kelvinnchucks:
let me not lie... in this current economy nobody will read that till the end.

I was expecting moniepont tho... anyone that can summarize please tag me
I read and the author made a lot of sense. Nigeria is left out when it comes to macroeconomics ans its really painful.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by casualobserver: 8:29pm On Oct 23, 2025
we put a "tech savvy" youth in charge, i am not sure he understands his job.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Daisyle(m): 8:29pm On Oct 23, 2025
Especially those loan shark fintec app.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by dfrost:
kenny714433:
"Yet the intellectual property, cloud infrastructure, and retained earnings all sit offshore"

So were you expecting them to transfer to you their intellectual property?

So we have cloud storage facility in Nigeria? Do we even have 24/7 electricity to support that?

Were you expecting them to share their hard earned earnings with you?

Apart from supporting corrupt politicians, what else do we know how to do best?
Population means more money for them else they won't be flying business class on BA, et al to come tap the resources.

It should be a win-win for all.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by FarahAideed: 8:32pm On Oct 23, 2025
Those sponsoring this media campaign against Naira time will fail , you people love to reap where you didn't sow ....After killing airtime lending in Glo in and 9mobile you have now set your eyes on MTN ..... Nobody is stopping anyone from lending airtime , but just know you will never be allowed to do it from inside MTN billing systems .

VAS2 NET and Interswitch implemented airtime lending solutions for Glo and 9 mobile , how did that go ?
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Arobake: 8:33pm On Oct 23, 2025
Well, that's very sad, because reading things like this especially in this economy, is beneficial to each one of you & concomittantly to making the very economy much better.
Ignoring articles like this, that sentisises you to the economy is sad. And detrimental to the economy & the nation.

#One wise white man once said: "if you want to hide anything from the black man,write it in plain sight."

Beyond sad. ☹️

Kelvinnchucks:
let me not lie... in this current economy nobody will read that till the end.

I was expecting moniepont tho... anyone that can summarize please tag me
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Arobake: 8:37pm On Oct 23, 2025
No.
Summary is: how billions of naira is siphoned out of the country, and we can put an immediate stop to it, as other countries like us have done.

SpaceX:
Summary

How tech giant earn big!!!!
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by stonemasonn: 8:41pm On Oct 23, 2025
casualobserver:
we put a "tech savvy" youth in charge, i am not sure he understands his job.
It's not just about being tech savvy, data governance and compliance knowledge/skills is the key here.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Arobake: 8:44pm On Oct 23, 2025
I like this.

But also, maybe if they realise they could make an insensible massive amount of money from this source, just maybe it could encourage them to make light etc better? Because frankly, I won't deceive myself and think patriotism, "loss of intellectual property", & all those big words matter to Nigerians- only dough matters.

kenny714433:
"Yet the intellectual property, cloud infrastructure, and retained earnings all sit offshore"

So were you expecting them to transfer to you their intellectual property?

So we have cloud storage facility in Nigeria? Do we even have 24/7 electricity to support that?

Were you expecting them to share their hard earned earnings with you?

Apart from supporting corrupt politicians, what else do we know how to do best?
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Konquest: 8:45pm On Oct 23, 2025
Josepholome:
Nigeria’s Digital Extraction Problem: How Firms Like Optasia Profit from Nigerians Without Building Nigerian Wealth — and How to Fix It


https://leaders.ng/2025/10/23/digital-extraction-in-nigeria-how-tech-giants-earn-big-while-local-wealth-stagnates/
Optasia... What about Glo which is a Nigerian brand. How far have they gone in reaching the various stellar performances of the other Big 3 global brands?
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by casualobserver: 8:46pm On Oct 23, 2025
stonemasonn:
It's not just about being tech savvy, data governance and compliance knowledge/skills is the key here.
its all part of it. its like being an Architect and not knowing the legal framework, planning laws etc
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Arobake: 8:49pm On Oct 23, 2025
Ouch!
**Not enough quality content? "Ouch" is a cry of pain, not "content"**

Oxygen1998:
That's why you'd always remain at your level
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by free2ryhme: 9:01pm On Oct 23, 2025
Josepholome:
Nigeria’s Digital Extraction Problem: How Firms Like Optasia Profit from Nigerians Without Building Nigerian Wealth — and How to Fix It


https://leaders.ng/2025/10/23/digital-extraction-in-nigeria-how-tech-giants-earn-big-while-local-wealth-stagnates/
All na still wash

Nothing una dey produce
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by FuckYeyeMods:
Sincerely, I will hold the igbos responsible for things like this.
They're not passionate about nation building or whatsoever. They are always ready to partner with these entities.
Always after ready made goods to dump on the populace in as much as their is money.
In countries like China, Russia or even Turkey, Igbos will not control the amount of wealth they control in Nigeria.
A igbo man will goto China, order goods and sell at exorbitant price to Nigerians and no Nigerian government agency is checkmating such act.
The money citizens can use for other things or should use for other things, they'll use it to buy just one single item from Igboman because they have somewhat monopolise the trading market.
They will come to your state, contribute nothing economically or build the youths. They'll will be importing every yeye thing which is killing local businesses.
A Igboman will take (steal) sample of local product to China for mass production to come dump on Nigerians thereby killing the local manufacturer.
Igbo communities in every State leave differently and talk arrogantly because of host State governments who don't care about their citizens.
This is not bigotry or hate towards any sect or particularly the Igbos.
It's just the bitter truth.
Anybody who's passionate about Engineering and Creativity, R&D would 100% understand my stands.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by jaxxy(m): 9:19pm On Oct 23, 2025
Most tech startup companies operate that way. Capital light businesses.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by kpankpangolo: 9:53pm On Oct 23, 2025
When the journalist is serious, he’ll reduce the write-up to five hundred words. I will not read it. I will post a comment because that was my original plan.

Tax those companies. If they’ve seen potential in a country which its leaders killed all form of promotion, let them pay the price.
Re: Digital Extraction: How Tech Giants Earn Big While Local Wealth Stagnates by Princedapace(m): 10:01pm On Oct 23, 2025
No issue, make Nigerians build their own and base it in Nigeria. No issue at all. Build yours
1 2 Reply

Here's How To Earn Big While Helping Customers Create Their Dream HomeHow FG Will Tax Profits Made By Global Tech/Digital Giants In Nigeria — OsinbajoGuide To Sheabutter Opportunities, Export, Extraction And Refinery In Nigeria234

Loan Apps That Can Give You Up-to ₦100k, ₦200K And 1 Million Naira In NigeriaJUMIA: My First Time Buying On Jumia - A Disaster - Big MistakeWhere Can I Print Quality Business Cards In Nigeria At An Afforadable Cost?