Tag: Restrictions

  • Japanese investors fret over forex restrictions

    Japanese investors have expressed concerns over Nigeria current foreign exchange (forex) restrictions.

    Led by the Japanese Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs and member, House of Representatives, Mr. Shunsuke Takei, the investors appealed to the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun to intimate the Japanese trade and investment delegation on government’s measures to address the forex issues “which have not been resolved.”

    Takei made this request yesterday in Abuja when a delegation of Japanese Public and Private Joint Mission promoting Trade and Investment in Nigeria paid a courtesy visit to Mrs Adeosun.

    Takei led  32 private sector and government organisations to the Ministry of Finance for the engagement. 12 private sector firms on the delegation were from the banking, insurance and manufacturing sectors.

    Takei said the delegation was in Nigeria to look for investment opportunities given the country’s huge population and market as well as the new Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) which has potential for growth.

    Japanese investors, he said “were desirous of investing in Nigeria, but were also concerned about challenges in the areas of security, legal and power environments.”

    Mrs Adeosun explained to the Japanese delegation that “Africa’s biggest economy is now out of recession and wants to grow again; the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) articulated by the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari was designed to stabilise the economy and propel it into growth.”

    She told the Japanese mission that “the country is open and ready to continue to do business with the rest of the world and urged the big Japanese companies to invest in the country by setting up manufacturing plants, instead of shipping-in finished products.”

    She said Nigeria welcomes Japanese investors in banking, insurance, manufacturing and other sectors. She said: “We will assist you to do well. Many companies came into Nigeria and are doing very well and there is nothing to stop Japanese firms from doing very well.”

  • Customs re-imposes restriction on rice

    Customs re-imposes restriction on rice

    Nigeria Customs Service has re-introduced the restriction order on importation of rice through land borders across the country.

    Comptroller-General of Customs, Col. Hameed Ali (Rtd) gave the approval for the reversal of an earlier policy in October 2015 which allowed rice imports through the land borders, once appropriate duty and charges were paid.

    At a review session held with Comptrollers of Border Commands and Federal Operation Units held in Abuja, the Service noted that dwindling revenue from rice imports through the Land borders do not match the volume rice landed in neighboring Ports.

    Rather, reports from Border commands indicated an upsurge in the tempo of rice smuggling.

    The Customs Public Relations Officer, Mr.  Wale Adeniyi made this disclosure in a statement Tuesday.

    According to the statement, implementation of the restriction order got off to a smooth start, with a high level of compliance in October 2015.

    However, revenue started dwindling from January 2016, with importers blaming access to Forex as major impediments.

    During the Five-month period when the importation was allowed October 2015-March 17th 2016, a total of 24.992 Metric Tonnes of Rice valued at N 2, 335,131,093 ( Two Billion, Three Hundred and Thirty Five Million , One Hundred and Thirty One Thousand and Ninety Three Naira) was imported through the land borders.

    It adds that: “During the period, total revenue generated amounted to N 1,685,112,810 (One Billion, Six Hundred and Eighty, Five Million One Hundred and Twelve thousand, Eight Hundred and Ten Naira Only). This is considerably lower than the revenue projected to be generated with the removal of import restrictions.

    “However, an upsurge in the number of the seizures has been reported across the land borders since January 2016. In the first two months of the 2016, a total of 9238 bags were seized, with Duty Paid Value of N64,666,000 was made by the Customs anti-smuggling patrol teams of  Federal operations and Border commands.

    “Comptroller-General of Customs noted that his Officers and Men cannot be totally exonerated from the abuse associated with the implementation of the order on Rice, as his office has been inundated with reports of collusion between them and Rice importers. He has directed investigation into the reports, insisting that indicted personnel will be sanctioned.

    “While directing a zero-tolerance to rice imports through the land borders irrespective of volume with immediate effect, he stated that importers who have already initiated import processes will have a grace period ending Friday 25th March 2016 to clear their consignments.”

  • CBN explains forex restrictions

    CBN explains forex restrictions

    Foreign currency restrictions will be lifted only when reserves have been built up to an appreciable level, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said.

    Addressing journalists in Abuja at the weekend on the recent decision by Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) to limit the use of their debit cards overseas, the CBN’s Director, Monetary Policy Department, Mr. Moses Tule, said the restrictions will be lifted “as soon as we build up reserves; when you see us building reserves to $50 billion, $60 billion, $70 billion, $200 billion or more”.

    Tule added: “The moment we begin to build reserves, we expect that just as this restrictions were not there most of the restrictions will be lifted, but for now every hand needs to be on deck. We need to earn foreign exchange. As a country you can improve your business processes in order to export and earn foreign exchange and that is what the country is calling on patriotic Nigerian businessmen to do.”

    There have been criticism of the restrictions and banks’ decision to limit the use of debit cards overseas.

    Explaining the build-up to the debit card restrictions by the DMBs, Tule said: “The limitation on the use of debit or credit cards outside the country was not a limitation that was placed by the CBN. They were restrictions that Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) placed because they have to settle whatever transactions you make with your debit cards with their corresponding banks in foreign currency and if the banks do not have the foreign currency to do that then you create a liability on them which will crystallise on their balance sheets.”

    The CBN, he said, sympathises with Nigerians who are unable to use their debit cards overseas, but the CBN, Tule said, cannot stop it. His words: “At this point, we are in in this country, the obvious answer is that the CBN cannot stop what the banks are doing now and the reason is very obvious. Our priorities as a nation for the allocation or use of foreign exchange is 1) for the settlement of matured LCs (letters of Credit) that have been opened for importation; 2) for the importation of petroleum products until such a time either when we have our refineries fully operational and we are not in a position to import fuel again to ensure that the wheels of economic development continue turning and running  and 3) for the importation of raw materials.”

    By the time the CBN meets these conditions “given the level of current flow into the reserves, by the time we meet these three priority areas, you will discover that people who are using their debit cards overseas for shopping can never be on the priority list. We would then go back to the point where the foreign exchange, which is a stock dries up that is the position we are in today.”

    The CBN director added: “Whatever decisions banks take with respect to allowing their customers use debit cards overseas, those are strictly business decisions. They are looking at their balance sheets, they are looking at their capacity to settle with their corresponding banks the obligations that will crystallize on their balance sheets, rather than open themselves to the people who are out their shopping in foreign currencies, using their debit cards for one thing or another.”

    The CBN official admitted that they understand that not all the demands will be for shopping, but “we have seen that the reserves are not there and what we have; we have to use essentially for the purposes that will keep the wheels of the economy running”. “We have to produce for export we can’t continue to depend only on the export of crude oil,” he said.

    Tule noted that “the banks have not said customers do not have access to their dollar accounts; what they are saying is that if you deposited cash, you can ask for cash; if the deposits in your account were by way of transfer and you want to carry out a transaction you can only transfer; that is what they are saying.”

    The CBN, he said, frowns at the situation where “you benefited from cheap foreign exchange, bought imported raw materials by using the official channels and you brought in your proceeds, now you want to go and draw cash so that you can sell them in the parallel market, we will not allow you because first you generated the proceeds by accessing the official window, which was more cheaper so we wouldn’t allow you”. “These are some of the reasons behind our saying that we placed those restrictions on even people who had dollar export domiciliary accounts background but they can have access to these accounts if they want to import raw materials and that is what we have stuck to.”

    Shedding more light on the reason for the forex restrictions, Tule said that “the currency of use in this country is the naira, not the dollar; you cannot expect carrying out dollar transactions over the counter in an economy whose currency is not dollar-denominated we must learn to respect our systems and laws that govern our system.”

    The law, he said, clearly states that “your deposits are in naira; if you have a domiciliary account the proceeds, if earned outside the country, you can receive foreign currency deposits into it or if you have earned foreign currency the foreign currency can be deposited in that account. I don’t see you carrying out a transaction and earning foreign currency within Nigeria; you will earn naira. If you had a business that earned foreign currency it will come into your domiciliary account by way of transfer; it is not going to come into your account by way of cash. If you have got cash deposit in your domiciliary account, there are only two ways about it, a) either you’ve patronised the black market or you’re doing some short changing and that’s against the law. The CBN would not like to sit and watch our people using the legitimate channels of the financial system to promote illegality.”

    Asked if the CBN will stop funding bureau de change (BDCs) and if it is considering devaluing the naira, Tule said: “From the policy perspective, very hard choices will have to be made and we will make them for the sake of the country and that is the bottom line of that budget speech delivered by President Muhammadu Buhari, the decisions are not to harm or hurt anybody, the decisions would have to be made but it would not be to the detriment of the generality of Nigerians so we must ensure that we promote the welfare of the average Nigerian.”

    Whatever the nature of the hard decisions that policy makers will take in 2016, the CBN, Tule said would not shut down BDCs because “when you make policy decisions that involve the public you must protect the employment those agencies are generating, whether you like it or not the BDCs the way they’re currently run one way or another generates some level of employment we don’t want to take decisions that will increase the unemployment situation in the country.”

    “It is not as if we are oblivious of some of the things they’re doing we have placed a whole regime of sanctions on erring BDCs in the past, we will continue to fine tune the regulatory mechanism around BDCs, but the button line is that we shouldn’t take decisions that will worsen the situation for policy decisions, you must always be careful when you take them even if you want to take such decisions you must be careful when to take it you must weigh the fundamentals and all the issues round you so we’re looking at the entire regime of BDC operations, the policy regime around it and the regulatory framework; we are fine tuning it and will continue to fine tune it but I definitely assure that we definitely are going to have better BDCs we are beginning to see the example of Travelex that is the way it will go,” Tule said.

  • Forex restrictions grow foreign reserves to $2.5b

    Foreign exchange reserves rose by $2.5 billion last month to hit $31.5 billion.

    Head of Markets, FBN Capital, Olubunmi Ashaolu, in a report, attributed the increased earnings to the introduction of the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s)  forex restrictions policy.

    CBN, in a circular dated June 23,  banned 41 imported goods from forex either in the interbank market or in the bureaux de change.

    “We have heard some well-informed estimates that imports of the listed goods had accounted for 20 per cent of forex utilisation: this would amount to about $900 million per month on the basis of the CBN’s figure for utilisation (for goods and services) for first quarter 2015,” he said.

    Ashaolu said import demand had eased due to the squeezing of real incomes, adding that the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has started to transfer its forex reserves from the commercial banks to the CBN.

    “This brings us to the untested theory that the plugging of forex leakages has begun. This could also explain why the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) distribution of June revenues was higher than May’s when oil prices would have suggested the opposite,” he said.

    According to CBN regulations, forex from the markets (whether direct CBN forex sales, the interbank or the parallel markets) can no longer be used to import these items. The restricted list includes some food items, such as rice, margarine, imported palm oil, other vegetable oils, and tomato paste.

    The objective of the restrictions is to curb demand for imports, safeguard the forex reserves, which have been affected by declining oil earnings and portfolio outflows, and boost local production.

     

  • Restrictions on technology import ’ll hurt economy, say experts

    As United States and European Union ban solar power technology import from China, stakeholders said it would not be in the interest of the economy for the government to take protectionist measures that could harm the economy, the President, National Association of Small Scale Industrialists (NASSI), Chief Chukwu Nwachukwu has said.

    He said restricting the panel products would not only hurt the interests of the Chinese industry, it would wreck the healthy development of the local solar and clean energy sector.

    Nwachukwu said what the government ought to look at it is whether dumping is taking place and whether it is damaging the local industry.

    He said the government should allow entry of foreign players in the solar panel manufacturing market only if they set up local facilities in joint ventures with domestic manufacturers.

    Nwachukwu, however, warned the government not allow the market to be flooded with low quality finished solar panels.

    He said Nigeria should not become a dumping ground of solar panels, which are not durable due to their poor quality.

    To meet the energy requirements of the economy, the Director-General,KadunaBusiness School, Dr Dahiru Sani, said there was need to encourage developers of solar power plants.

    He suggested that the government look at tax incentives and subsidies that would encourage foreign players to build manufacturing facilities without banning their exports.

     

     

     

     

    Sani urged the government to look into the issue of product quality seriously and help protect local manufacturers and their products to strengthen capacity of the country to tackle power shortages by tapping the environment-friendly renewable energy source.