
Freelancers across Nigeria’s digital economy are coming under increasing financial strain as inflation, currency volatility, and rising operating costs compress earnings and force a rethink of personal finance strategies.
In a new advisory, Margaret Banasko, head of marketing at FairMoney Microfinance Bank, says survival in today’s environment depends less on income growth and more on disciplined savings and cost management.
Banasko argues that survival in today’s economic climate is less about income generation and more about financial discipline, as inflation, currency volatility, and rising operating costs erode disposable earnings across the digital workforce.
Her position reflects a structural shift within Nigeria’s labour market. With the country leading sub-Saharan Africa’s pool of 17.5 million online gig workers, and an estimated 87.3 per cent of employed Nigerians classified as self-employed according to data from the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the freelance economy is considered central to economic activity.
Yet, as Banasko notes, this growth is occurring against a backdrop of intensifying cost pressures.
“The Nigerian freelancer’s life isn’t without its hurdles. Between the biting impact of inflation, a volatile exchange rate, and the soaring costs of power and data, many digital professionals are finding their margins squeezed like never before,” she said.
This margin compression is forcing financial priorities, with savings emerging as a primary tool for resilience rather than a secondary goal. According to Banasko, the volatility inherent in freelance income cycles makes liquidity management essential.
“Surviving this economic climate requires more than just hard work; it demands a shift in mindset,” she stated, adding that “success now hinges on thinking outside the box and maintaining the discipline to save.”
Central to her recommendations is the creation of a “dry month” emergency fund; a buffer designed to smooth income fluctuations common in gig work. By building reserves equivalent to three to six months of expenses, freelancers can mitigate the risk of income shocks during low-demand periods.
Equally significant is the push toward cost optimisation. With the removal of fuel subsidies driving up transportation expenses, Banasko advocates a transition toward remote work models as a direct cost-saving strategy. Reducing commuting frequency, she argues, can free up substantial cash flow that can be redirected into savings instruments.
She extends this efficiency logic to client engagement, recommending a shift from physical meetings to virtual interactions. Beyond direct cost savings, the move enhances productivity by reducing time lost in transit; effectively increasing billable hours.
However, the most critical intervention, in her view, lies in automation.
“Manual saving rarely wins against the temptation of daily spending. Letting money sit idle in an inflationary economy is a cost in itself; putting it into high-yield accounts ensures your money keeps pace with your hustle,” Banasko noted.
According to her, digital financial tools, including automated savings and fixed-term deposit products, are positioned as enablers of this discipline, helping freelancers ring-fence funds and reduce the risk of impulsive expenditure.
Another emerging strategy, she pointed out, is collaborative cost-sharing, particularly for internet data; a core operational expense for digital professionals. Group subscription models offered by telecom providers allow freelancers to pool resources and reduce per-user costs, effectively lowering their “digital office” overhead.
Taken together, these measures point to a development in how success is defined within Nigeria’s gig economy. As Banasko noted, ‘revenue generation alone is no longer sufficient’.
“In Nigeria’s volatile gig economy, the true measure of a freelancer’s success is not gross revenue, but capital retention,” she said, underscoring the importance of preserving earnings in an inflationary environment.
Banasko concluded that the continued expansion of freelancing within Nigeria’s labour market is reshaping expectations for financial services, with growing emphasis on products that enable savings, smooth income volatility, and improve liquidity management across irregular earnings cycles.





