The
Senate yesterday asked the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to pull the brakes on
its plan to restructure and introduce N5,000 banknote.
Banking,
Currency and other Financial Institutions, Committee chair Bassey Otu handed
down the order at a news conference in Abuja. Senator Otu, who described the
proposed introduction of N5,000 currency denomination as a “burning issue”,
said the measure the apex bank planned to take could only be necessary in a
country undergoing a major financial crisis.
The
CBN, he warned, must be careful in order not to send wrong signal to households,
domestic sector and foreigners that the Nigerian currency is valueless.
CBN Governor Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, last week unfolded plans to
restructure the naira and introduce N5,000 currency denomination next year.
But Otu said a memo would immediately be dispatched to CBN to
halt all further actions on the banknote, until the Senate is properly briefed.
He
wondered why the Senate would be kept in the dark over such an important
financial restructuring that is bound to affect the economy. Otu who represents
Cross River South, noted that the interest of the lawmakers was the ripple
effect of the new currency on Nigerians. He said a project like the
introduction of N5,000 note and wholesale overhaul of the currency required
parliamentary approval because of the expected fiscal implications on the
economy. Said
Otu: “I believe that a project of this nature requires parliamentary
approval because there are numerous and fiscal implications on the entire
economy.
“This
type of action is only taken where there is a major crisis and the CBN must be
very careful in order not to send a wrong signal or message to households,
domestic sector and even the external ones that the Nigerian currency is
valueless, which I believe is definitely not, and that for every unit of value,
they need to carry a large quantity of cash.