A Practical ICT-Based Automated Framework for Sustainable Agricultural Finance and Financial Inclusion in Nigeria

by Chinyere Ebirika, Mike Johnson Ugbogbo, Oluwaseyi Oluwatola Omonijo, Oluwatobi Akanbi Johnson

Published: May 3, 2026 • DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.110400050

Abstract

Agricultural financing institutions in Nigeria are still structurally fragmented despite growing efforts to promote digital inclusion initiatives. Majority of the existing Agri-Fintech interventions concentrate on digital payments, mobile access or isolated credit analytics; however, they rarely offer an integrated architecture that connects data capture, decision-making automation, secure execution and continuous monitoring. In order to addresses that gap, this study proposed a Design Science-grounded ICT-based automation framework that restructures agricultural financial service delivery as an end-to-end system. Drawing on recent literature, the framework translates documented problem clusters into a five-layer architecture that includes stakeholder data formalization, interoperable ICT integration, embedded decision intelligence, secure transaction execution and adaptive feedback mechanisms. Each layer directly addresses a literature-identified systemic weakness, with explicit traceability between theoretical gaps and architectural components. An illustrative system execution scenario is used to demonstrate operational feasibility and end-to-end process flow. Evaluation results indicate that the framework improves integration, reduces decision time, enhances transaction traceability and supports inclusion in low-connectivity environments. The system reduces information asymmetry and limits fund diversion through controlled execution mechanisms. The framework offers a context-aware blueprint suitable for low-connectivity and high-risk agricultural environments, emphasizing execution integrity, transparency and institutional accountability. Despite being conceptual, the model establishes a systematic framework for prototyping, empirical validation and extendable policy implementation in developing countries.