Tuesday 1 October 2013

Cash-less policy: Charges on withdrawals, deposits begin Wednesday

Cash-less policy



The Central Bank of Nigeria will on Wednesday begin the full implementation of its cash-less policy in the Federal Capital Territory, Rivers, Kano, Anambra, Ogun and Abia states.
This follows the end of a three-month moratorium on the charges given to customers who withdraw or deposit higher than the amount stipulated in the cash-less policy document.
The policy allows the CBN to peg the daily cumulative cash withdrawal or deposit limit for individual accounts at N500,000, while that of corporate accounts is fixed at N3m per day.
Addressing journalists in Abuja on the commencement of the policy in the FCT and the five states, the Deputy Governor, Operations, CBN, Mr. Tunde Lemo, said the imposition of the charges on withdrawals higher than the prescribed limit would ensure an effective implementation of the cash-less policy.
He said, “We will start applying the charges from October 2, which is Wednesday, because the three months moratorium would have expired.

“We are glad to announce that having worked with stakeholders, we have been able to ramp up facilities in Abuja and five other locations, and then, we are set to build up the critical mass requirement for the cash-less policy in those areas.”
He said any customer who deposited above N500,000 per day from Wednesday would be charged three per cent, while withdrawals above the limit would attract five per cent charge.
Lemo said, “For corporate bodies, the threshold is N2m. If you deposit or withdraw any money above the threshold per day, if it is deposit, it will attract three per cent charge, and if it is withdrawal, it attracts five per cent.
“Those are the charges that are already applicable in the Lagos area that we are now bringing to this location.”
He said customers needed not to pass through the onerous task of depositing and withdrawing money over the counter but should instead use electronic fund transfer.
The CBN deputy governor said electronic payment in Lagos accounted for 70 per cent to 80 per cent of high value transactions on daily basis.

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