By: John S. Morlu II, CPA
When trust rises, transaction friction falls. Lower fraud expectations instantly reduce invisible costs that don’t show up in balance sheets but absolutely show up in boardroom anxiety levels. You don’t see “cost of paranoia” listed under operating expenses — but you feel it in how slow deals move in high-distrust environments. In Benin, business feels less like a boxing match and more like a dialogue that assumes both parties secretly want to sleep peacefully rather than spiritually cursed.
Translation: trust has an economic multiplier effect.
The Unspoken Cost of Distrust (Also Known as the “Do-I-Need-My-Lawyer-for-This?” Tax)
In environments where trust is low:
- Every agreement demands excessive legal clauses
- Negotiations drag on as each side suspects hidden traps
- Advance payments require heavy escrow conditions
- Extra due diligence teams are hired to investigate basic promises
- Meetings feel like espionage operations with business cards
That extra cost is invisible but deadly. It slows trade, reduces speed to execution, and causes investors to ask the deadliest question:
“Is this deal worth the emotional stress?”
In Benin, the cost of distrust is comparatively lower — and that makes doing business cheaper.
Result:
- A handshake opens the door.
- Contract finalization is smoother.
- Parties don’t assume betrayal as the default outcome.
- Repeat partnerships are easier to maintain.
- Emotional energy is conserved for productive work, not suspicion-driven defensive maneuvers.
Real-Life Comparison: Buying From a Supplier in Two Countries
| Scenario | Country A (High Distrust) | Benin (Trust-Balanced) |
| Email #1 | “We need stricter terms.” | “Let’s clarify delivery timeline.” |
| Email #2 | “We need a guarantee you won’t vanish.” | “Kindly confirm shipping method.” |
| Conversation | “What’s your angle?” | “Let’s build a long-term relationship.” |
| Emotional atmosphere | Suspicion | Calm assurance |
| Afterthought | “He’s probably lying.” | “I believe he wants a fair deal.” |
| Spirit involvement | None officially | Unseen spiritual oversight (possibly reviewing transaction in advance) |
Trust = Liquidity in Human Contracts
The more people trust each other, the faster money moves. Investors bring capital sooner. Local partners negotiate smoother deals. Banks feel safer issuing credit. SMEs take growth risks with less fear of being defrauded. Human transactions begin to function with the speed of digital payments because both sides operate from a stability mindset.
In Benin, this manifests in:
- Faster informal partnerships
- Less escalation of minor conflicts
- Higher rate of repeat trade relationships
- Improved reputation feedback loops (good actors are known quickly)
- A culture of “return tomorrow” instead of “run before they disappear”
Macro Translation: Trust Lowers Risk Premiums
International investors price risk into their returns. A country perceived as chaotic must offer high returns to attract capital (high-risk, high-reward). A country perceived as calm, predictable, and culturally honest can offer moderate returns and still attract investment.
Benin increasingly gives investors the feeling: “We may not become billionaires here overnight, but we won’t lose sleep or money to chaos.”
This translates economically to:
- Lower Psychological Risk Premium
- Higher Willingness to Enter Joint Ventures
- Longer Commitment Horizons
- Easier Governance Reporting for ESG-focused investors
- Better FDI stickiness (investors don’t run at the first cloud of uncertainty)
The Secret Sauce: Predictability Is a Currency
Investors don’t always choose the most exciting market. They choose the most predictable one. They don’t always choose the loudest opportunity. They choose the one where breakfast meetings do not turn into legal emergencies by lunch.
In Benin, the emotional temperature of business engagements is generally low-drama. That calmness converts into trust. Trust converts into economic flow. Economic flow converts into sustained growth.
📖 Coming Up Next: Tourism & Expat Comfort: Safe Streets, Comfortable Interactions
Author: John S. Morlu II, CPA is the CEO and Chief Strategist of JS Morlu, leads a globally recognized public accounting and management consultancy firm. Under his visionary leadership, JS Morlu has become a pioneer in developing cutting-edge technologies across B2B, B2C, P2P, and B2G verticals. The firm’s groundbreaking innovations include AI-powered reconciliation software (ReckSoft.com), Uber for handymen (Fixaars.com) and advanced cloud accounting solutions (FinovatePro.com), setting new industry standards for efficiency, accuracy, and technological excellence.
JS Morlu LLC is a top-tier accounting firm based in Woodbridge, Virginia, with a team of highly experienced and qualified CPAs and business advisors. We are dedicated to providing comprehensive accounting, tax, and business advisory services to clients throughout the Washington, D.C. Metro Area and the surrounding regions. With over a decade of experience, we have cultivated a deep understanding of our clients’ needs and aspirations. We recognize that our clients seek more than just value-added accounting services; they seek a trusted partner who can guide them towards achieving their business goals and personal financial well-being.
Talk to us || What our clients says about us

