Central Africa has launched its first regional credit information bureau (CIB) aimed at reshaping the way banks and microfinance institutions price risk and expand lending across the six CEMAC countries. The platform, operated by Creditinfo Central Africa (CICA), was launched in Douala on January 20, 2026, under the auspices of Cameroon’s Ministry of Economy, Planning and Regional Development, together with the Governor of the Bank of Central African States (BEAC) and senior stakeholders from the financial sector. Built in partnership with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and CreditInfo Group, the bureau will integrate credit data that was previously fragmented or unavailable. This constraint has long hindered lending decisions and delayed loan approvals across the region.
The launch follows the formal recognition of CICA by BEAC pursuant to Decision No. 142 dated November 25, 2025, making it the first credit bureau authorized to operate in the entire CEMAC zone. The regulatory framework provides for consumer consent, confidentiality and data protection, and establishes obligations for supervised institutions to share credit information. By standardizing and centralizing borrower history from banks, microfinance institutions, and other regulated lenders, the Bureau provides credit providers with a common, timely reference point for assessing solvency and repayment status. The result should be faster, more informed credit decisions for lenders and a more direct path to formal financing and more transparent pricing for borrowers.
BEAC Governor Yvon Sana Bangui positioned the agency as a direct response to persistent asset quality stress in the sub-region. Recent data shows that the share of non-performing loans in total loans remains at around the mid-teens and rising, which equates to approximately CFF2 trillion worth of credit impairment losses. By reducing information asymmetries, the Department is expected to support more accurate risk-based pricing and enhance portfolio quality over time. In a high-level panel discussion at the Douala event, IFC Africa Vice President Ethiopia Tafala highlighted that robust credit information systems correlate with broader access to finance and more resilient banking systems, noting that lower uncertainty generally compresses risk premiums and widens the range of viable borrowers without compromising prudential standards.
For policymakers, this development will address structural gaps that have raised the cost of capital in Central Africa relative to its peers. Commercial lenders in the zone have long cited limited data on borrower behavior and weak market visibility as barriers to quick and competitive loan underwriting. Gwendolyn Abnau, President of the Cameroon Commercial Banks Association, highlighted the practical benefits in day-to-day credit operations, highlighting the prospect that financial institutions will have shared visibility into a borrower’s obligations and payment history, enabling faster turnaround times and more consistent credit decisions. Over time, authorities and development partners expect to see tangible gains in financial inclusion as thin-file customers, including small businesses, households, women, young founders, and rural borrowers, build credit histories across institutions and borders.
Governance and standards are central to the Department’s credibility. BEAC aligns its framework with international good practices, including explicit consent to data sharing, rules for accuracy and timely updates, and mechanisms for consumers to contest and correct files. To ensure broad coverage, data submission requirements by regulators are envisaged, while usage policies are ordered to allow lenders to view financial institution reports as part of the underwriting process. The first bilateral service agreement in Cameroon is scheduled for February 2026, with gradual introduction to other CEMAC markets as technology integration and user acceptance testing is completed.
To anchor expectations, officials are tying the department’s success to measurable results. Priority metrics include the percentage of credit institutions connected, the percentage of new loan applications supported by financial institution inquiries, trends in underwriting times and approval rates, and subsequent trends in non-performing loan ratios. The initial focus is on data quality. That means comprehensive reporting of both positive and negative information, timely correction of inaccuracies, and robust cybersecurity and audit trails. These safeguards are important to include as well as to be prudent, as the benefits of information-rich lending depend on confidence in the integrity of the file.
Local experience shows that awards are important. In markets that introduced credit bureaus earlier, lenders are now making better distinctions between high- and low-risk borrowers, reporting tighter risk spreads for high performers, and more targeted use of collateral, particularly for small and medium-sized businesses. The CEMAC initiative aims for similar outcomes, but adapts it to regional realities, including a banking sector with a heterogeneous balance sheet structure and a large microfinance footprint. The authorities are also positioning the bureau to support broader economic integration by providing cross-border visibility into the behavior of borrowers within the monetary union, enabling greater efficiency for banks and mobility benefits for customers.
The launch of Douala is a decisive step in the modernization of Central Africa’s financial infrastructure. It combines clear regulatory obligations with a private operator with experience operating credit bureaus in diverse environments, and a development partner focused on inclusivity and resilience. If financial institutions connect on schedule, data quality maintains standards, and its use is integrated into underwriting, it should help institutions reduce uncertainty, compress risk premiums, and expand access to finance where it is most needed. For households and businesses across the CEMAC zone, it will provide a more predictable path to affordable credit and a stronger foundation for growth over time.
Marcy Fouseau


