Deposit money banks have allayed fears on the immediate implementation
of the acceptance of cheques into savings accounts, as directed by the Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN), saying that it will help to monitor cash flows in the
nation’s financial system.
They also said the embedding of the Bank Verification Number (BVN) on
payments cards will facilitate the tracking of money laundering in the system.
An analyst and currency strategist at Ecobank Nigeria, Kunle Ezun, said:
“I don’t think there is any difficulty placed on the banks by the directive. It
is about the security for values for both customers and the financial
institution.
“This is another way to track money laundering because more transactions
can be recorded. Almost everything about transactions now can be tracked with
BVN embedded on cards and cheques moved to savings accounts.”
Industry experts described the CBN directive as long overdue, as there
is no other excuse for banks to hide under the cloak of savings account to
reject cheques, while perpetrating underhanded deals against the banking
system.
Besides, a new guideline for the operations of International Money
Transfer Operators (IMTOs), which only three companies, MoneyGram, Western
Union and RIA could meet, is seen as a foil to arrest racketeering among the
operators.
The tripartite target of tracking illegal funds flows, quantity of money
in circulation and deepening of cash-less project is behind the new directive
handed down to banks on Tuesday.
CBN had on Tuesday ordered banks to begin with immediate effect the
acceptance of cheques into savings account to the tune of N2 million per
customer daily.
It also ordered the embedding of Bank Verification Number (BVN) on
payments cards to facilitate identification and biometric-based authentication
on payments devices.
The development raises a new hope that the long-mooted talks about
biometric payments system would soon be realised, as Automated Teller Machine
(ATM), Point of Sale (POS) and Kiosk (in the case of agent banking channels’ transactions
would become biometric enabled.
Expatiating further, Ezun, said the possibility of a full blown
biometric channel for transactions debuts as a foil to identity theft.
He said: “Even the current machines have the capacity to operate with
biometrics; it’s just that they have not been activated to perform the
function.
“This is a plus for the system, although it is long overdue. Previously,
CBN couldn’t implement its monetary policy effectively, because it needs to
have a total view of how much money is in the system. It is a problem for
monetary policy if you cannot estimate properly the money in circulation.
“People have stashed values outside the system on the excuses of not
having any current account and those values end up not coming into the system.
It is now an enabler for everybody,” he said.
For him, it is going to strengthen the payment system as every amount of
cheques will have opportunities to be captured, and no one has any reason to
reject it, as long as the person has an account.”
With regard to the international money transfers, CBN’s Acting Director
of Corporate Communications, Isaac Okorafor, said the huge number of Diaspora
remittances, estimated in excess of $25 billion are not getting into the
economy because of racketeering by the IMTOs.
The new guide for IMTOs, he said, directed that all such remittances be
channelled into banks and paid in naira according to market rates, since the
exchange rate is no longer pegged.
Under the new arrangement, the dollars would be sold to Bureau De Change
(BDC) operators by banks, to take care of travellers’ allowances and reduce
pressure on the reserves.
The new arrangements therefore, may have burst the rent seeking deals
between the operators and banks, as those who were operating freely are now
alleging a “draconian rule” against CBN.
An industry source who pleaded anonymity, disclosed that two-third of
the remittances bandied around do not enter Nigeria and some parts that did are
not fully declared.
“Some of the illegal flows are suffocating the naira, because the
dollars are first turned to naira and in return, the dollars are chased with
the same naira by the same people,” the source said.
But the CBN spokesman said that CBN “did not stop the licence of any
money transfer operator in Nigeria. All we have done is to ensure that money transfers
are done transparently, legally and for the benefit of the country’s economy.
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