Baltimore Sun

Nigeria sees shortage of cash amid currency redesign push

- By Chinedu Asadu

ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigeria’s push to replace its paper money with newly designed currency notes has created a shortage of cash, leaving people unable to buy what they need and forcing businesses to close across the West African nation, experts and business groups said.

The Central Bank of Nigeria says the redesigned denominati­ons of three notes and new limits on large cash withdrawal­s would help curb money laundering and make digital payments the norm in Africa’s biggest economy.

But the process to replace the old currency notes is “rushed,” and commercial banks don’t have enough new cash to give to customers, pushing demand higher than supply, said Ayokunle Olubunmi with Nigeria’s main ratings agency, Agusto and Co.

The central bank “doesn’t want us to be spending cash; they want us to be doing transactio­ns electronic­ally, but you can’t legislate a change in behavior,” Olubunmi said.

The government is pushing for a cashless economy that is more inclusive and says the changes will drive economic growth. Critics are skeptical, pointing to decades of chronic corruption in which government officials are known to loot public funds and create more hardship for the many struggling with poverty.

As of October, more than 80% of $7.2 billion in circulatio­n in Nigeria was in private hands, but 75% of that has now been deposited with financial institutio­ns, the central bank governor, Godwin Emefiele, said recently.

He extended the deadline for Nigerians to deposit their old banknotes by 10 days, to Feb. 10.

Even as more Nigerians deposit old currency in banks, Associated Press found some financial institutio­ns were still issuing the outdated notes to customers as of Monday. Bank customers told the AP that they are allowed to withdraw very little cash and face high bank charges for each transactio­n.

Digital payments run by banks are often unreliable in Nigeria, leaving businesses struggling as growing numbers of customers have been unable to find the cash to pay for goods and services. The situation has created a parallel market for people to illegally sell the new banknotes, the Nigeria secret police said Monday.

“Someone might want to transfer funds to you, but it can’t be processed and they don’t have cash because of this issue,” said Chima Ekwueme, who sells car parts in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja. “Sometimes, I ask them to drop my goods and go and find money anywhere.”

The cash supply crisis has disrupted such sales across the country, forcing a good number of businesses to shut down, said Muda Yusuf, head of the Nigeria Center for Promotion of Private Enterprise.

“The two critical sectors of the economy — trade and commerce as well as agricultur­e — have been very badly affected because they do a lot of transactio­ns in cash, especially in rural areas,” Yusuf said, adding that authoritie­s should allow more time for the old notes to be gradually replaced by the new ones.

 ?? SUNDAY ALAMBA/AP 2015 ?? Nigerian currency is counted in Lagos. Nigeria’s push to replace the local currency notes with newly designed ones is creating an economic crisis, experts say.
SUNDAY ALAMBA/AP 2015 Nigerian currency is counted in Lagos. Nigeria’s push to replace the local currency notes with newly designed ones is creating an economic crisis, experts say.

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