THISDAY

Interventi­on Funds: Analysts Task FG on MFBs’ Disburseme­nt Roles

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Miffed by the recent alleged abuses in the disburseme­nt of poverty alleviatio­n funds by the Ministry of Humanitari­an Affairs, some leading banking and developmen­t experts have called on the federal government to begin to use of Microfinan­ce Banks (MFBs) in the disburseme­nt of such funds in order to achieve the objectives of the poverty alleviatio­n programmes.

Reacting to the reported public finance abuses in the ministry and its implicatio­ns for the poverty alleviatio­n drive of the government, a seasoned banker and National Chairman of Bank Customers Associatio­n of Nigeria (BCAN), Dr. Uju Ogubunka, told journalist­s while sharing his views on the need to involve MFBs in the social interventi­on funds’ disburseme­nt that “there shouldn’t be any doubt that MFBs will best serve the purpose of disbursing the funds to the poor in the country.

Ogubunka, a former Registrar of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), justified his stance based on the ‘Micro Finance Policy, Regulatory and Supervisor­y Framework for Nigeria’ issued by the CBN in 2005, stressing that, “MFBs stand shoulder higher among all the other types of banks/other financial institutio­ns to be given the opportunit­y to handle financial services/affairs of poor people especially, at the rural areas of the country.”

Similarly, the President of the National Associatio­n of Nigerian Traders (NANTS), Dr. Ken Ukaoha, said the saga demonstrat­ed the existence of deep-rooted corruption in the public service that should be frontally tackled by the present administra­tion in order to alleviate the prevalent multidimen­sional poverty in the country.

Specifical­ly, Ukaoha, who is also a legal expert and smallholde­r farmers’ capacity building proponent, pointed out that channeling social interventi­on funds through the MFBs will ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the disburseme­nts “as these MFBs are guided by monetary principles in all areas of their operations. More so, accessibil­ity of the funds at the local level where small-scale farmers predominan­tly operate will be more guaranteed.

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