After more than two decades at the commanding heights of institutional finance, including her tenure as Executive Director at AXA Mansard, Rashidat Adebisi has stepped into a new phase of influence—this time as a systems reform advocate.
Her newly unveiled initiative, “The Re-Architecture Project,” is not merely a career transition but a structural intervention, whose core is a bold thesis: Nigeria cannot realistically attain the Federal Government’s projected $1 trillion economy without fundamentally redesigning its insurance and financial architecture.
Adebisi, a Financial Systems Strategist and Insurance Thought Leader with over two decades of experience, including roles as CFO and Chief Client Officer at AXA Mansard, contends that the financial services sector must move beyond incremental reform and embrace systemic redesign, particularly in how it integrates with the informal economy, which accounts for over 60 per cent of employment across Africa.
In her assessment, Adebisi who is a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (FCCA) and an alumna of the University of Oxford’s Saïd Business School, maintains that macroeconomic resilience will remain fragile unless insurance penetration, risk management frameworks, and long-term capital mobilisation mechanisms are recalibrated to accommodate informal enterprises and underserved demographics.
The timing, she argues, is strategic. With the advent of the Nigeria Insurance Industry Reform Act (NIIRA 2025), the sector stands at what she describes as a “watershed moment.”
Macro-Economic Resilience as a National Imperative
The Re-Architecture Project reframes insurance from a transactional product into the “secret sauce” of a resilient economy.
Adebisi asserts that for Nigeria to achieve its macro-economic targets, the insurance industry must bridge the massive “protection gap,” as penetration currently remains below 3% across many African markets.
Insurance as an Economic Safety Net: “Insurance is the net that allows a nation to jump higher,” Adebisi stated.
She emphasizes that every decimal point in a financial model represents a business stabilized and a future secured, providing the essential foundation for macro-economic growth.
Infrastructure Beyond Capital: The project posits that Nigeria is not lacking capital but “invisible infrastructure”, specifically Trust, Access, and Regulatory Clarity.
NIIRA 2025: From Compliance to Competitive Advantage
Adebisi describes NIIRA 2025 as a vital structural reinforcement rather than regulatory friction. The Act’s focus on Capital Recalibration, Stronger Governance, and Consumer Protection is essential for building the institutional rigour required to support a $1 trillion GDP.
Recalibrating Foundations: The reform represents a necessary recalibration of the industry’s foundations while accelerating digital transformation.
Strategic Policy Fluency: “Those who view compliance as a burden will struggle; those who see it as a competitive advantage will thrive,” Adebisi noted, identifying policy fluency as a core leadership competency for the next decade.
Economic Visibility: Integrating the Informal Sector
A central pillar of the project is “Engineering Inclusive Ecosystems,” exemplified by the FileAm App. This initiative reimagines tax compliance as a digital utility for SMEs and informal entrepreneurs, moving them from economic invisibility into formal digital tax rails, insurance coverage, and credit ecosystems.
The Wealth Pipeline: By building digital identity and verifiable credentials, the project aims to turn compliance into credit history, and credit history into the capital access required for intergenerational wealth creation.
As a Financial Systems Architect, Adebisi’s blueprint for the next decade is governed by a singular core rule: Data-aware. Policy-conscious. Africa-focused.. The project calls on industry leaders and policymakers to move beyond incremental adoption toward designing interoperable ecosystems that can sustain the Africa of tomorrow.
“The future of finance in Africa will not be inherited. It will be architected,” Adebisi concluded. “It is our turn to build.”
