A recent Visa report has shown that the top market contributors to eCommerce in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) over the last 3 years were South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya, with Ghana also showing growth, having replaced Kenya in the top three contributors in 2020.
SSA may be one of the smallest regions of ecommerce globally, but it shows steady growth potential. During lockdown, the region saw new eCommerce users rise by 5 per cent when compared to the active base in SSA the previous year.
Mr Lineshree Moodley, Head of Visa Consulting and Analytics (VCA) in Sub-Saharan Africa said: “The three leading markets in SSA are starting to mature, providing the region with an established foundation and when twinned with the growing penetration of eCommerce, it offers players in the payment space an opportunity they can capitalise on while helping to further accelerate the expansion of eCommerce in the region.”
Visa’s white paper, entitled, eCommerce developments across Sub Saharan Africa (SSA), confirmed that, as the world becomes increasingly digital, eCommerce has been driving the acceleration of digital commerce.
“It has experienced phenomenal growth rates around the world and even recent setbacks as a result of the continuing COVID-19 pandemic haven’t stopped its rise. In fact, according to recent GroupM estimates, eCommerce sales are projected to grow to $7 trillion across the globe by 2024,” it added.
The most important eCommerce enablers – the ability to access financial services, digital payment channels and digital infrastructure – are starting to take hold across SSA. Although, cash may remain the dominant payment instrument in the region for now, there are signs that this will eventually change.
The report stated that in Nigeria, for example, cash is still particularly prevalent, while in Kenya, mobile money is most popular and many South Africans choose cards as their main payment methods.
“The Covid-19 pandemic has pushed consumers towards digital payments in the key eCommerce markets for SSA. At a primary level of cash versus digital payment instruments, there has been a strong move away from the use of cash across the board.
“This is due to a shift to eCommerce behaviour that is mostly enabled by digital payments and a reduced preference for face-to-face interactions that involve handling common surfaces, such as cash.
“When exploring digital payments usage, the use of cards has increased across the continent, with the highest uptick taking place in Kenya,” the report stated.
However, the white paper said, the nature of this usage is interesting.
“There has been a strong preference for contactless payments, a notable point for enabling safe card payments on delivery, as well as in the use of e-wallet services, as cash is seen as a vector for the virus.”
“With these realities, how can payment industry stakeholders and merchants capitalise on these opportunities to sustain the growth of eCommerce in the region,” the report asked.
But Mr Andrew Uaboi, Country Manager, Visa Nigeria, said: “that it is important that eCommerce platforms are designed with end-to-end mobile enablement in mind and that online payments provide a strong user experience that is secure and appears seamless to the customer, both for local and cross-border transactions.
“Customers in SSA are making use of a wide range of digital payment instruments, so it is becoming increasingly important that eCommerce offers multi and even omni-channel experiences. At Visa, we continue to work with traditional and new financial services companies to develop new products and capabilities that deliver on this.”
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