The Mercury

Trying to lure back money to Nigeria

- Yinika Ibukun

TUNJI Adeyemi travelled from Lagos to Britain seeking to persuade Nigerians living there to deposit their pounds in his bank’s vaults.

Based on the crowds of people sitting at tables filling out forms in a Glasgow arts centre, he is finding a receptive audience.

The Scottish city was just one stop in Sterling Bank’s push to get Nigerians abroad to open 5 000 new accounts back home this year, said Adeyemi, head of the bank’s year-old diaspora-services programme.

The visit late last year, which also took Adeyemi to Manchester and Belfast, winning more than 500 new accounts, is intended to boost foreign-currency revenue amid a shortage that has crippled everyone from manufactur­ers to airlines.

“We are ready to go all out,” said Adeyemi, who is planning another multi-city trip, probably to Chicago and Atlanta, by April. “It’s not about having a physical branch in the UK. It’s about your hunger and aggressive­ness.”

The government of Africa’s top crude producer is also trying to boost foreign currency inflows via the estimated 15 to 18 million Nigerians who live overseas.

The Debt Management Office is raising a $300 million (R3.99 billion) diaspora bond, First Bank of Nigeria, a book runner for the issue, said last week. And the finance ministry is meeting investors in London and the US this week to promote the sale of a 15-year Eurobond, the longest maturity yet.

The Nigerian diaspora officially sends about $20bn home annually.

The purpose is to fund this year’s record 7.3 trillion naira (R307bn) budget. A decline in oil income and the exit of foreign investors have created dollar shortages, contributi­ng to the nation’s worst downturn in more than two decades.

The Nigerian diaspora officially sends about $20bn home annually, the world’s fifth-largest receiver, according to World Bank data. Based on a Sterling Bank study, remittance­s through informal channels may equal that amount.

“Perhaps one of the reasons we have not collapsed is because of the diaspora’s support,” said Abike Dabiri-Erewa, who advises President Muhammadu Buhari on diaspora affairs. While investment and equities slump, remittance­s were relatively stable as of last year, data shows.

Dabiri-Erewa’s team has drafted a policy that would commit the government to help reduce remittance fees and enable diaspora investment. And by advocating for a law that grants Nigerians abroad the right to vote, the former lawmaker hopes emigrants will have one more reason to give back.

Remittance­s are a lifeline in a nation where two-thirds of the population lived on less than a dollar a day in 2010, according to the most recent poverty survey by Nigeria’s statistics agency. Nigeria received 60 percent of the remittance­s sent to sub-Saharan Africa in 2015, says the World Bank, estimating that remittance­s to the region grew 3.4 percent in 2016.

Azimo, a London-based money transfer company, reckons that 80 percent of the wires it sends to Nigeria are for family support, which could include food, school fees and health care. “Remittance­s are an injection of money into people’s hands,” said company co-founder Michael Kent. “They spend it where they think they’ll have the most impact.” – Bloomberg

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