The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has activated plans to double foreign-currency remittance flows through formal channels by granting 14 new International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) Approval-in-Principle (AIP).
This was disclosed in Abuja on Wednesday by the Bank’s
Acting Director of Corporate Communications, Mrs. Hakama Sidi Ali.
Ali stated that the initiative will help increase the
sustained supply of foreign exchange in the official market by promoting
greater competition and innovation among IMTOs to lower the cost of remittance
transactions and boost financial inclusion.
According to her, “This will spur liquidity in Nigeria’s
Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEX), augmenting price discovery to
enable a market-driven fair value for the naira.”
It will be recalled that the CBN Governor, Mr. Olayemi
Cardoso, had recently declared: “We’ve set ourselves a target to double
remittance flows into Nigeria within a year, a goal I firmly believe is within
reach.
“We are wasting no time driving progress to remove any
bottlenecks hindering flows through formal channels permanently. We have a
determined pathway and a sequenced approach to tackling all challenges ahead,
working hand in hand with key stakeholders in the remittance industry.”
Continuing, Sidi Ali said that the CBN viewed increasing
formal remittance flows— one of the major sources of foreign exchange,
accounting for over 6% of GDP—as a means of reducing the historical volatility
in Nigeria’s exchange rate caused by external factors, such as fluctuations in
foreign investment and oil export proceeds.
The increase in the number of IMTOs is one of the primary
actions initiated by the CBN’s remittance task force, overseen by Governor
Cardoso as a collaborative unit pulling together specialists to work closely
with the private sector and market operators to facilitate the ease of doing
business in the remittance ecosystem in Nigeria.
The task force was established as a direct result of an
executive learning session with IMTOs during the World Bank/IMF Spring Meetings
held in Washington DC, United States of America, in April 2024.
The task force will meet regularly to implement strategy and
monitor the impact of its measures on remittance inflows.
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