The Deputy
Governor, CBN, Mr. Tunde Lemo, disclosed this in an interview with the News
Agency of Nigeria in Washington on the sidelines of the ongoing
Spring Meeting of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
He said,
“By the middle of the year, we will start to produce the second generation of
lower denomination notes, now in paper and not in polymer.”
“My plea
is that Nigerians should exercise patience; it wasn’t the fault of the CBN; it
was just because we had to go back to the drawing board to rethink the ‘Project
Cure’ in the light of the wish of the public that we should not go ahead with
the N5,000 notes and lower denominations.
“We will
correct that in the course of the year. Polymer certainly will be phased out.
In fact, we are phasing out polymer. No new note is being printed in
polymer now.”
Lemo told NAN
that when the CBN was going to introduce the polymer currencies, its search
showed that they could last longer than ordinary paper notes.
He said,
“However, with the benefit of hindsight, we probably should not have dumped
polymer because, yes, the substrate lasts longer, but the in-consubstrate began
to fade; we didn’t realise that at the time of introduction.
“So, part
of ‘Project Cure’ was actually to move away from polymer substrate to paper;
unfortunately, we had a push-back because of the issues around N5,000 note and
coins.
“The
entire programme was put in abeyance; otherwise by now, we should have stopped
producing polymer.’’
Lemo said
the CBN had awarded a contract for the printing of the higher denomination
notes to a foreign company because of low capacity at the Nigerian Printing and
Minting Company.
He said
the bank would begin to receive the fresh notes from June.
On the
campaign for careful handling of the naira, Lemo said that it was unfortunate
that it was not successful, but noted that it was a criminal act to abuse the
naira going by the CBN Act.
The deputy
governor said, “Unfortunately, CBN is not a law enforcement institution; we
left that in the hands of the law enforcement institutions and that has not
kicked in.
“I still
go to parties and see people spraying money, stepping on money, I see touts
distributing mint-fresh money that should go to customers.’’
Lemo also
told NAN that the CBN had talked to the police to step up surveillance
to reduce their abuse of the naira, adding that the bank had no right to arrest
people who sold the currency on the streets.
He
said the act of abuse and sale of the naira by touts had defeated the clean
note policy of the bank, but assured that efforts were being made to tackle the
problem.
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