The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
said it would withdraw N500 billion from the banking system through the recent
increase in the cash reserve requirement of banks.
Mr Godwin Emefiele answering
questions during his screening by the Senate for Central Bank Governorship in
Abuja.
Deputy Governor (Corporate
Services), CBN, Mr. Bayo Adelabu, disclosed this while addressing members of
the House of Representatives Committee on Banking and Currency on an oversight
visit to the Lagos office of the bank.
Monetary Policy Committee of the
CBN, Tuesday, in addition to devaluing the naira by 8.3 per cent to N168 per
dollar, raised the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) to 13 per cent from 12 per cent,
and the cash reserve requirement to 20 per cent from 15 per cent.
The decision to raise the MPR was,
however, queried by members of the House Committee led by its chairman, Hon.
Chukwudi Jones Victor Onyereri. The committee faulted the decision, saying it
would lead to further hike in lending rates charged by banks in the country.
Adelabu, however, defended the
decision of the apex bank, saying: “The decision of the MPC was the best we
could do under the circumstance that the economy is presently.
“We noticed that a lot of things
contributed to the pressure on the naira. Number one factor is the declining
revenue from oil. Our source of revenue in this country is just oil and when
oil price declined by about 25 per cent in the last one month, we expected that
there would be pressure on the foreign reserves.
“We believe that the pressure on the
naira, apart from the declining oil prices, is also as a result of liquidity in
the banking industry whereby a lot of frivolous demands for foreign exchange
are being made by customers of banks, because the banks are able to extend
credits to them.
“We are saying no. We want you to
lend to the critical and productive sectors of the economy, not trading, not to
import toothpicks. So we are saying that the only thing we can do to reduce the
capacity of the banks to grant loans to these customers for trading is to mop
up more of the monies available to the banks, which is why we increased the CRR
on private sector deposits to 20 per cent from 15 per cent, which will amount
to about N500 billion withdrawal from the banking industry.
“We believe it will reduce the
pressure on the foreign reserves. If we don’t do that, the impact on the common
man is going to be increased cost of production. What the CBN is saying is that
we need to become more patriotic. We should patronise locally made goods and
services. We do not need to be importing everything.”
CBN warns against counterfeiting of
Naira
Meanwhile, the CBN has warned
members of the public against counterfeiting the naira.
The CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele,
gave this warning yesterday in Abuja, while declaring open the maiden temporary
exhibitions of the Currency Museum on “Counterfeit Money: Who Pays?” and
“Non-Interest Banking in Nigeria” held at the bank’s auditorium.
Represented by the deputy governor
in charge of the Operations Directorate, Alhaji Suleiman Barau, Emefiele noted
that educating the public would enable them identify counterfeited notes should
they encounter such.
According to him, the CBN remains
committed to safeguarding the value of the Naira by ensuring that banknotes are
not susceptible to counterfeiting.
In his opening remarks, Director,
Currency Operations Department of the CBN, Mr. Olufemi Fabamwo, observed that
technological advancement posed a serious threat for national currencies to be
counterfeited.
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--Vanguard News
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