The
Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Lamido Sanusi, has said that
about $11bn (N1.73tn) has been taken out of the country through the
airports this year, a development he describes as worrisome.
Sanusi, while speaking
at an event organised by Bank Directors Association of Nigeria in Lagos
on Thursday, wondered why many Nigerians now preferred carrying out
transactions with the United States dollar at the expense of the local
currency, the naira.
According to him, the
dollar is becoming the country’s second currency based on its usage,
adding that the central bank’s aim for contemplating the introduction of
the N5,000 bill was to address the development.
He said, “In this
country, almost everybody uses the dollar. This year alone, the records
we have based on the declared amount at the airports is getting to about
$11bn in cash that was taken out of Nigeria.
“Why would anyone walk
out of an airport with $5m? Well, they will say is because the law has
made it clear that you can take any amount so long as you have declared
it and I cannot stop you. These are some of the issues we wanted the
introduction of the N5,000 note to address.”
Sanusi said the planned
introduction of the N5,000 bills was part of a thought process aimed
also at driving the cash-less policy initiative.
He said, “If people want
to carry N15m, they go to Bureau De Change and change it into dollars.
You give them $100,000 and that is about N15m. The dollar has become a
second national currency. Barely two months ago in Zambia, the nation
passed a law stating that anyone who refuses to accept its local
currency and who charges for a transaction in a foreign currency goes to
jail for 10 years.
“But you come to Nigeria
and you see people paying their children’s school fees in dollars. We
laugh about this but it is an important issue. Can you go to America and
buy something using pounds sterling? Or you go to Tokyo and use dollar
and see if the hotel will accept the currency? Before they will transact
with you, you must change it into their local currency.
“So, this is a problem,
and it is apart from the fact that we are in a country where monetary
and economic policies have been subjects to popular vote. In fact, it is
not an election! If I want popular vote, I will go and contest for the
chairman of a local government. Everybody is an economist, a central
bank governor and many more.”
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