Senate wants lower currency notes replaced with coins

The Senate, yesterday, urged the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, to urgently convert lower currency notes into coins to facilitate retail transactions in the country.The upper chamber said that this state of thinking was because, as has been observed, in developed countries as the United Kingdom, United States of America, Japan, China, European Union, and the entire United Arab Emirate, coins were still used as means of exchange through cash transactions.To make sure this flies, the Senate has urged the CBN to sanction any commercial bank that refuses to collect coins from customers, even as it requested that the apex bank redesigned the nation’s currency to cater for what it described as highly repetitive transactions of the country’s economy.It also asked the CBN to intensify efforts to bringing back coins into circulation in the nation’s market.The Senate came arrived at this decision following the motion put forward by Senator Mustapha Bukar (APC, Katsina North), entitled “Non-usage of coin currencies in Nigeria and its negative effects on the economy.”“The Senate noted that according to the Central Bank of Nigeria, all currencies shall be legal tender in Nigeria at their face value and that Nigeria’s currency as at now comprises three coin denominations and eight note denominations, including 50kobo, N1 and N2, while the note denominations are N5, N10, N20, N100, N200, N500 and N1000,” Senator Bukar said.He noted that in Nigeria, there were two types of retail payments, the highly repetitive small value transactions such as urban transportation, sweets, cigarettes, kolanuts, vegetables, sachet water etc, as well as less frequent but high value transactions, such as clothing, footwear, raw foodstuffs, electronics etc.He said coin currencies globally were designed to cater for the almost non-stop transactions because of the nature and conditions under which they happen, such as the crowded markets, bus stations, congested traffic and varying weather conditions, including rainy, sunny and humid.While the Senator observed that countries regularly upgraded their coinage to keep pace with the prices of this category of retail items, he added that the Senate was aware of the overwhelming majority of Nigerians engaging in the highly repetitive small value transactions due to their income and locations.He also expressed the Senate’s concern that though the nation’s currencies were in notes and coins, indications were that coins were fast going out of fashion and into extinction in Nigeria; Bukar said the Senate also regrets the fact that coins disappeared in Nigeria because the face value of the metal used in producing it was lower than its intrinsic value, as people always took them to black/goldsmiths to turn into jewelry and other ornaments.

Discover more from NewsBreakers

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

What's your reaction?

Excited
0
Happy
0
In Love
0
Not Sure
0
Silly
0

Comments are closed.