The
Central Bank of Nigeria should convert the country’s lower currency notes into
coins to facilitate “highly repetitive” retail transactions, the Senate said
Tuesday.
The advice came after a Senator
spoke on the implications of rejection of the existing coin denominations for
the economy.
“The local retailers keep
rejecting the coins because commercial banks won’t accept them as deposit, even
when they are reflected on paper, and the CBN still recognizes them as legal
tender,” said Mustapha Bukar, the APC Senator representing Katsina South.
Given the rejection, plus the loss
of value of the coins due to inflation, Mr. Bukar, therefore, suggested
conversion of the the lower notes into coins to “cater for highly repetitive
transactions” which “overwhelming majority” of Nigerians are engaged in due to
“location and income”.
“Since the three coin
denominations of 50 kobo, one kobo and 10 kobo have lost their values due to
inflation, the conversion of lower currency notes to coins will facilitate
retail transactions in the economy, like we have in developed countries,” the
senator said.
“Despite the huge budget by the
CBN on sensitising Nigerians on the need to accept coins, the transaction
chains were broken and banks and customers reject the currency, thus, promoting
corruption and escalating inflation to the extent of diminishing the value of
the coins.”
Quoting unnamed “experts”, he said
coin denominations were important in helping control devaluation of country’s
currency. Taking an instance from the U.S.A, he said a reason why one cent had
not phased out “is due to inflationary ramifications of such a move”.
He observed that coins were still
being used in advanced countries, including the United Kingdom, Japan, the
European Union and the United Arab Emirates, but lamented Nigeria has now
become the only country in West Africa “where there is a total absence of the
coins in the economy.”
“In
Nigeria, there are two types of retail payments; the highly repetitive small
value transactions, such as urban transportation, sweets, cigarettes, kola
nuts, sachet water, vegetable etc., as well as, less frequent but high value
transactions like clothing, footwear, raw foodstuff, electronics etc.
“Coin currencies are designed
globally to cater for highly repetitive transactions because of the nature and
conditions under which they happen, such as crowded markets, bus stations,
congested traffic, and varying weather conditions, including rainy, sunny and
humid conditions in which notes are ill-suited for them.
“Countries regularly upgrade their
coinage to keep pace with the prices of this category of retail items,” Mr.
Bukar explained.
Following the motion, the Senate,
led by Ike Ekweremadu, resolved to urge the CBN to intensify efforts to bring
coins back to the economy; and convert lower currency notes into coins to be
used “side-by-side with the notes” to facilitate highly repetitive retail
transactions in the country.
The Senate also urged the CBN to
impose sanction on any commercial bank that rejects coins as deposit.
Nigeria’s current currency notes
are: N5, N10, N20, N50, N100, N200, N500 and N1000.
Mr. Bukar did not mention exactly
which ones he defined as “lower notes”
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