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CBN to halt Ways and Means loans to FG until payment of outstanding debt

Multinational firms leaving Nigeria due to naira fluctuations, say pharmaceutical manufacturers Multinational firms leaving Nigeria due to naira fluctuations, say pharmaceutical manufacturers

Olayemi Cardoso, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), says the financial institution will halt its ways and means advances to the federal government.

Cardoso disclosed this on Friday when he appeared before the senate committee on banking, insurance and other finance institutions, in Abuja.

He said the apex bank will no longer be a part of Ways and Means agreement with the federal government until all outstanding debts are refunded.

The economist said the decision complies with Section (38) of the CBN Act (2007).

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Ways and Means is a loan facility through which the CBN provides short-term financing to cover the government’s budget shortfalls.

“I am pleased to note the fiscal authorities efforts in discontinuing ways and means advances,” Cardoso said.

“This is also in compliance with section (38) of the CBN Act (2007). The bank is no longer at liberty to grant further ways and means advances to the federal government until the outstanding balance as of December 31, 2023, is fully settled.

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“The bank must strictly adhere to the law limiting advances under ways and means to 5 percent of the previous year’s revenue.”

According to Cardoso, the payment of the outstanding balance of the Ways and Means will control inflation in the country.

On December 30, 2023, the national assembly approved President Bola Tinubu’s request for the securitisation of outstanding N7.3 trillion Ways and Means debt balance.

Prior, on May 23, 2023, the senate approved the sum of N22.7 trillion Ways and Means loan, thereby securitising the debt. Tinubu’s predecessor — former President Muhammadu Buhari — had made the securitisation request on December 28, 2022.

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Securitisation is the practice of pooling together various types of debt instruments and selling them as bonds to investors.

‘NO MORE FUNDING FOR INTERVENTION PROGRAMMES’

Further addressing the lawmakers, the CBN governor said it would no longer fund intervention programmes.

He said the apex bank had halted over N10 trillion quasi-fiscal measures which were disguised as “intervention programmes” over the years.

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“On our side at CBN, we have responded with significant monetary policy tightening to rein in inflationary pressures,” he said.

“We have also halted quasi-fiscal measures totalling over N10 trillion at the CBN previously disguised as development finance interventions. These measures have contributed to an increase in money supply, raising prices to the level of inflation we are grappling with today.

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“On the issue of development finance, we are coming to terms with a large amount of liquidity that was pumped into the system that created a lot of distortions and a lot of it didn’t get to what it was designed to get to.

“All we are saying as the central bank is that we cannot engage in interventions.”

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Cardoso also said at the forthcoming monetary policy committee (MPC) meeting scheduled for February 26 and 27, the bank will review other situations and take further decisions on these important issues.

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