Glamtush
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Beauty
  • Business & Brands
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Features
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Telenovelas
  • Events
  • Home
  • News
  • Beauty
  • Business & Brands
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Features
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Telenovelas
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Glamtush
No Result
View All Result
Home Business & Brands

Banking The Economy That Actually Exists

by editor
April 19, 2026
in Business & Brands
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Economy
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsappShare on LinkedinShare on Telegram

There is a version of the Nigerian economy that the banking sector has always served well. It is the economy of salaried professionals, corporate treasurers, documented collateral, and monthly pay cycles.

 

 

 

It is the economy that fits neatly into conventional credit models, standard account structures, and the risk frameworks that Nigerian banking inherited from its colonial and post independence institutional architecture. That economy is real, and serving it matters.

 

There is another version. It is the economy of the cooperative chairwoman in Ogun whose members pool contributions weekly. The textile trader in Balogun who turns inventory four times a month but has never had a formal credit history. The agro dealer in Kaduna whose working capital needs spike in planting season and collapse in the dry months. The artisan in Aba whose business has been profitable for fifteen years, but whose collateral is her workshop and her reputation. This economy is also real. It is, by most measures, larger than the first; and for most of Nigerian banking history, the sector was not designed to serve it.

 

The gap is not a matter of intention. It is a matter of architecture. Conventional banking products were designed around a specific customer profile: formally employed, predictable monthly income, assets that could be valued and pledged, credit history held in a bureau. Nigerians who fit that template, whether men or women, whether in Lagos or Kano, were served well. Those who did not, regardless of how productive their economic activity, were structurally underserved. They were not refused service. The products simply did not fit the shape of their lives.

 

The numbers confirm what anyone who has spent time in a Nigerian market already knows. According to the 2023 EFInA report, 26 per cent of Nigerian adults remain financially excluded. The World Bank’s surveys of Nigerian SMEs consistently identify access to finance as the single largest constraint on business growth, particularly among enterprises operating in the informal and semi formal sectors.

These are not idle businesses. They are enterprises generating real output and real employment, operating in a financial blind spot that the banking sector created not through malice but through product design.

 

 

A small number of institutions have begun to close that gap by building differently. Union Bank of Nigeria is one of them.
Through alpher, the bank’s financial proposition designed specifically for underserved market segments, Union Bank disbursed over ₦150 million in cash flow loans to entrepreneurs in a single three month window in 2025. The underwriting methodology behind alpher was built for businesses whose income flows through market associations and cooperative structures rather than through conventional payroll. These are businesses that traditional credit scoring cannot see, not because they are risky but because the scoring model was never calibrated for them.

 

 

Through alpher partnerships, the bank extended more than ₦106 million in discounted credit to seventy one businesses operating in market clusters that had previously sat outside the formal banking system. Its financial literacy outreach through alpher reached over 230 individuals in targeted sessions, and a parallel programme supported fifty nine previously unbanked entrepreneurs with micro grants and account opening.

 

 

The significance of these numbers is less in their volume and more in their method. alpher represents a decision to redesign the product rather than wait for the customer to fit the existing one. That is a meaningful institutional choice, because it requires a different kind of underwriting capability, a different kind of relationship management, and a different kind of patience than conventional retail or SME banking demands.

What makes Union Bank’s work on financial inclusion credible is that the institutional culture behind it is itself built on inclusion. Forty-five per cent of the bank’s board is female, exceeding the Central Bank of Nigeria’s thirty per cent governance threshold by fifteen percentage points.

 

The Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Mrs Yetunde B. Oni, leads an institution whose most recent graduate intake was sixty per cent female. The bank offers five month fully paid maternity leave, among the longest in the Nigerian banking sector, alongside ten day fully paid paternity leave, formalised adoption and surrogacy leave, and the CareCube crèche facility at the head office. These are not separate from the bank’s external inclusion work.

They are the internal architecture that makes it possible. An institution that invests in the breadth of its own talent base develops a broader product imagination than one that does not.

 

The honest assessment is that the Nigerian banking sector as a whole has a considerable distance still to cover. The informal and semi formal economy remains the largest segment of Nigerian economic activity, and it remains the least well served by formal financial institutions.

The products available to this segment are still too few, still too expensive in many cases, and still too narrowly distributed. Closing the gap will require more institutions to make the same architectural choice that the early movers have made: to build for the economy that actually exists, not for the economy that conventional banking assumed it was serving.

 

As Union Bank enters its 109th year, the inclusion question is not peripheral to its institutional story. It is central to it. A bank that has been present in Nigeria since 1917 has watched the country’s economic structure change repeatedly. The cooperative economies of the North, the trading networks of the South West, the manufacturing clusters of the South East, and the digital enterprises of Lagos each demand different financial products and different engagement models. The institutions that build for that diversity will be the ones that remain relevant. The ones that do not will find that the economy they were designed to serve is no longer the economy they need to serve.

 

Nigeria’s productive economy is broader, more diverse, and more resilient than any single customer profile can capture. The banking sector’s next chapter will be defined by which institutions recognised that earliest and built accordingly.

Union Bank of Nigeria has started. The work continues.

Related Posts

Dollar To Naira Rate Today
Business & Brands

Dollar To Naira Rate Today 19 April 2026 – Latest Black Market & CBN Rates

April 19, 2026
Ibadan Cultural Festival
Business & Brands

Adron Homes Powers Ibadan Cultural Festival, Strengthens Cultural Influence

April 19, 2026
Innovation Enterprise Support Fund
Business & Brands

FirstBank Partners Ekiti State Government On Launch Of Innovation Enterprise Support Fund

April 17, 2026
Ibadan Cultural Festival 2026.
Business & Brands

Adron Homes Champions Cultural Heritage At Ibadan Cultural Festival 2026

April 17, 2026
World Art Day Celebration
Business & Brands

Access Holdings, Coronation Group Partner Tate Modern For World Art Day Celebration On Nigerian Modernism

April 17, 2026
Enugu Custodial Centre
Business & Brands

Fidelity Bank Advocates For Inmates’ Welfare With Donation To Enugu Custodial Centre

April 16, 2026
Next Post
Dollar To Naira Rate Today

Dollar To Naira Rate Today 19 April 2026 – Latest Black Market & CBN Rates

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Adron Homes Advert

NDLEA Intercepts Cocaine

NDLEA Intercepts Cocaine, Loud In Food Flasks, Snacks

April 19, 2026
UTME Results Delay

JAMB Apologises For UTME Results Delay

April 19, 2026
Dollar To Naira Rate Today

Dollar To Naira Rate Today 19 April 2026 – Latest Black Market & CBN Rates

April 19, 2026
Economy

Banking The Economy That Actually Exists

April 19, 2026
Nigeria’s Drug Crisis

A Generation Under Siege As Nigeria’s Drug Crisis Deepens

April 19, 2026
Ibadan Cultural Festival

Adron Homes Powers Ibadan Cultural Festival, Strengthens Cultural Influence

April 19, 2026
JAMB Result Checker

JAMB Result Checker Portal Login: JAMB Result Is Out, Check JAMB 2026 Result Here

April 18, 2026
Open Heaven April 18 2026

Open Heaven April 18 2026 – Daily Devotional & Prayer Points

April 18, 2026
Itsekiri Group

2027: Itsekiri Group Pushes Alliance With Urhobo, Ijaw For Common Interest

April 18, 2026
Tax Fraud

Two Nigerians Face 100 Years In Jail Over Alleged $100m Tax Fraud

April 18, 2026

Magazine Cover

GPBN Associates Member

Fidelity Bank

GLAMTUSH

 

Glamtush publishes the latest trends in fashion, beauty, and lifestyle, as well as those making the fashion world interesting and adorable.

GLAMTUSH

Glamtush publishes the latest trends in fashion, beauty, and lifestyle, as well as those making the fashion world interesting and adorable.

 

RELEVANT PAGES

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

REACH OUT

Do you have any news for us? Event Coverage, Press Releases or Adverts? Then reach out to us via glamtush@gmail.com or glamtush15@gmail.com

OFFICE ADDRESS

Lagos, Nigeria

Copyright © 2022 Glamtush

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Glam Tush – Naija News & Entertainment News
  • Glamtush – Nigeria News, Nigerian Newspapers, Naija News
  • Latest Naija News Today
  • Terms And Conditions
  • Write for Us

© 2026 Glamtush

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Beauty
  • Business & Brands
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Features
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Telenovelas
  • Events

© 2026 Glamtush