Nigerians in Abuja, Kano, and Lagos are worried about the scarcity of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s redesigned N200, N500, and N1,000 banknotes.
Daily Trust reports that many Nigerians in Abuja, Kano, and Lagos are worried over the scarcity of the new notes, especially at banks’ Automated Teller Machine (ATM) points. Many Nigerians have not physically seen or transacted business with the notes.
This concern comes less than 28 days before the January 31 deadline CBN fixed for phasing out the old naira banknotes.
The CBN introduced the redesigned banknotes on December 15, 2022, saying they were part of measures to control inflation, mop up currency outside the banking system, fight corruption, and discourage the payment of huge cash to kidnappers and bandits, among other things.
Lagos
Checks at ATMs across Lagos indicated that the old notes are still being dispensed.
Customers who visited the banking halls before the holiday also disclosed that they were issued the old notes. One of them, Miss Iyunade Phillip said, “I was given old notes at the bank on Thursday, December 29. The new notes are very scarce. I am unsure if they can keep to the January 31 deadline because the notes are unavailable.”
Some bank workers in Ojo, Ikeja, and Agbara in Lagos and Ogun states said they had not been issued new notes, while others said the CBN was rationing the new notes.
“We don’t have any new notes and have not been dispensing any in the last week because CBN has not issued us any since the last one was disbursed,” said an Access Bank staff member at GRA Ikeja.
A Point of Sale (POS) operator in the Ogba area of Lagos, Mrs Zainab Ajibade, said she was still collecting the old notes because the new ones were hardly available. She said that banks were still issuing the old notes to them.
“They are still issuing the old notes to us, and in some cases, if you are lucky, you can get N2,000 worth of new notes if you are making a withdrawal of N50,000 or N100,000 depending on availability,” she said.
It was also observed that most customers who paid with cash at shopping malls and stores during the festive period used old notes.
Hawkers make brisk business
However, Daily Trust gathered that currency hawkers profited from the few redesigned notes in circulation.
In some areas, they charged as high as N10, 000 on a bundle.
A bundle of new N200 notes, N20,000, is sold for N30,000, while N500 and N1,000, N50,000 and N100,000, are sold for N60,000 and N110,000, respectively.
A currency hawker who spoke anonymously said the charges are their gain.
“There are very few new notes in the market. It was a difficult task getting them during the festive period. We would have made huge gains if they were available. We also paid for the few new notes we got so we have to put the charges,” he said, noting that they couldn’t meet the demand of their customers who wanted the new notes for the celebration of the New Year.
Abuja
Some of the banks our reporter visited in Abuja showed that the new naira notes had not yet been inputted into the ATM machines.
Despite the GTBank in Jabi having seven ATMs nearby, none were dispensing the new naira notes.
When our reporter visited the bank yesterday, a security guard said the machines were yet to be loaded with the new notes.
A bank customer, Danladi Isah, who withdrew from one of the machines, said he was not concerned about the type of money available.
He said that since the old currencies were still legal tender, he was not worried, as he would spend the notes he collected before the CBN’s policy took effect.
Another customer, Philip Abu, said it was tough at the bank he visited as everyone requested new banknotes. “What they did was to give a piece of the N1,000 notes to everyone making withdrawal; we even asked for the N500 note, but they said it has been exhausted.”
The situation was the same at Zenith Bank in Jabi, as it was observed that people who withdrew from the machines left with old notes of N1,000.
While a security guard confirmed that, a machine user, Paul Obinna, said that since the old notes could still be used for transactions, he had nothing to be afraid of as it was little funds he came to withdraw.
“People who need to be worried about the new notes engage in huge transactions. For me, if I should withdraw N50,000, all in old notes, I will spend them before the deadline takes effect,” he said.
However, some bank customers said that shortly after the December 15 rollout, some banks issued pieces of the new banknotes.
Halima Musa, a Jaiz Bank customer in Gwarinpa, Abuja, said, “I went to withdraw N50, 000 from the bank and they added just two pieces of the new N1,000 banknotes to it.”
Kano
The scarcity of new banknotes was also felt in Kano. Some residents who use ATMs frequently said they were not yet dispensing the new notes.
Likewise, those patronizing PoS and the operators expressed similar views.
Audun Ghali is a marketer in the popular Singer food market. He said, “I went to the ATM almost 10 times since the new notes were released, but it couldn’t dispense even a single N500 note of the new money.
“The only place one can get money is in the bank when you withdraw a huge amount. Even that is only if you are on good terms with the bankers,” Ghali revealed.
Another resident, Nazifi Sani, said he withdrew N70 000 from the ATM in the early hours of Monday, but all the withdrawals were old notes.
“In fact, they gave me new banknotes but it is the old version, not the new ones.”
Alhaji Nuhu Danliti, also a marketer, said the last time he withdrew money from the bank he got about two per cent in new notes from the total money. He also said his friend got N300, 000 when he withdrew N1 million from the bank.
“I used to do a lot of transactions as a marketer but I got the money once from the bank. For ATMs, it is not even there. I have never seen anybody that got the new naira notes from there. I withdrew N500, 000 from the bank and they gave 2%. My friend also got N300, 000 out of N1 million. That was the only time I got the new naira notes. And to tell you the truth, they are not qualitative. Some people are even rejecting it,” he said.
Jibrin Aminu, who operates a business centre including a PoS machine, said he has only seen the new naira notes once and it was brought by a customer who sent money to his relatives.
He said that although he receives and sends money, he does not get the new notes from the bank or from people who come for transfers.
‘January phase-off sacrosanct’
The CBN assured in a circular last week that “The current N200, N500, and N1,000 banknotes will circulate side by side with the redesigned banknotes until January 31, 2023, when the current notes shall be withdrawn from circulation and cease to be legal tender.
“The current banknotes remain legal tender till January 31 and should not be rejected as a means of exchange for purchasing goods and services.”
CBN also emphasised that there will be no extension after the January 31, 2023 deadline. It said: “There will be no extension, so citizens are advised to ensure they deposit all the N200, N500 and N1, 000 banknotes in their possession before the deadline of January 31, 2023.”
On December 22, 2022, the Deputy Governor of CBN, Aisha Ahmad, briefed the House of Representatives on the redesigned naira on behalf of the Central Bank governor, Godwin Emefiele, and said the bank ordered 500 million mint notes.
She, however, did not state how much those notes were worth.
“I am unable to share that now, only because I want to give an accurate figure,” Ahmad responded to the lawmakers’ enquiries.
Efforts to obtain new information from CBN were unsuccessful. The spokesman, Osita Nwanisobi, did not respond to the enquiries made yesterday, most likely because of the public holiday.