Factbox-Nigeria’s plan to ditch old banknotes

08.02.2023

Nigeria’s Supreme Court restrained the government, through the central bank, from ending the legal tender status of old banknotes on Friday following moves to replace them with newly designed notes.

The ruling came shortly after the International Monetary Fund said Nigeria should consider extending its deadline to swap old banknotes because of the disruption to trade and payments caused by a shortage of new notes.

THE PLAN

Nigeria’s central bank decided last year to start circulating newly designed 200, 500 and 1,000 naira notes, originally giving people until Jan. 31 to get rid of their old notes, which would no longer be legal tender after that date.

The bank said it wanted to reduce the amount of cash in circulation in order to better control liquidity, curb inflation and move towards a cashless economy.

Those with bank accounts were required to bring their old banknotes to a bank branch and have the corresponding amount credited to their accounts.

Millions of Nigerians who do not have bank accounts, especially in rural areas, were expected to exchange their old notes for new ones at banking agents.

In late January, the central bank extended the deadline until Feb. 10 to allow more people in rural communities to exchange their old notes.

GOALS

Almost 85% of the 3.23 trillion naira ($7.18 billion) in cash in circulation had been held outside of banks. In January, the central bank said around 1.3 trillion naira had been deposited into banks since October

To achieve its aim of reducing liquidity, the central bank said it would limit weekly cash withdrawals for bank account holders at 100,000 naira from January onwards.

Another stated goal of the changeover was to reduce fraud as the central bank says the new notes’ security features will make them harder to counterfeit.

COMPLAINTS

Many Nigerians complained the deadline was too tight for those living in rural areas or working in informal markets.

Politically, the plan came at a sensitive time, with elections for president, National Assembly seats, state governors and local authorities due in late February and March.

Politicians, who typically use hard to trace cash for campaign handouts, denounced the plan as too draconian.

With cash accounting for only 6% of Nigeria’s total money supply of 50 trillion naira, analysts doubted the operation would help the central bank’s stated goal of getting a grip on money supply and inflation.

Source: esting.com/news/economy/factboxnigerias-plan-to-ditch-old-banknotes-2998281

Ander nieuws

22.12.2023

White House: Nippon-U.S. Steel deal deserves ‘serious scrutiny’

The White House on Thursday said Nippon Steel Corp’s $14.9 billion proposed acquisition of U.S. Steel Corp deserves “serious scrutiny,” given the company’s core role in U.S. steel production that is critical to national security. In its first substantive statement on the deal, the White House said it viewed a strong domestic steel industry as […]

22.12.2023

Cybertruck designer says Tesla stainless steel pickup is no experiment

The angular, polarizing design of the Cybertruck will help boost the Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) brand, the electric vehicle maker’s chief designer said on Thursday, adding that the pickup was no experiment. “Love it or hate it, it’s a conversation starter, and it gets people talking about the brand,” Tesla Chief Designer Franz von Holzhausen said at […]

22.12.2023

Boeing’s first Dreamliner delivery to China since 2019 to land Friday

Boeing (NYSE:BA)’s first direct delivery of a 787 Dreamliner to China since 2019 is set to land in Shanghai on Friday, a step that could hasten the end of China’s freeze on deliveries of the firm’s profitable 737 MAX after more than four years. Privately owned Chinese carrier Juneyao Airlines on Thursday took delivery of […]