Digital transformation and bank capital adequacy in Sub-Saharan Africa
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Date
2026
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Asian Economic and Financial Review
Abstract
This study examines the impact of digital transformation elements on the capital
adequacy of deposit money banks in Sub-Saharan Africa, isolating the capital adequacy
component of the CAMEL performance framework using six proxies of digitalization.
An ex post facto study with panel data from listed banks in six countries (2013–2022)
was analyzed with descriptive statistics, relevant diagnostic tests, and a random effects
regression model, validated by the Hausman test. The findings indicate that financial
inclusion, internet utilization, and bank size substantially enhance capital adequacy,
whereas technology-related investments diminish it due to financial burdens and cyber
risk vulnerabilities. Using ATMs and mobile banking was insignificant, reflecting their
maturity as baseline utilities that are already considered basic infrastructure and thus not
able to generate a significant impact. The model accounted for 57.6% of the variation in
capital adequacy, highlighting the significant yet partial role of digitalization in solvency.
Findings highlight that digitalization is not uniformly beneficial; regulators and
compliance institutions should integrate digital risks into supervisory frameworks, and
banks should prioritize initiatives that strengthen prudential outcomes. The study
extends digital transformation literature by addressing capital adequacy, offering
evidence-based insights for balancing innovation with systemic stability in Sub-Saharan
Africa.
Description
Keywords
CAMEL framework Capital adequacy Capital Efficiency Digital transformation Internet banking Mobile banking