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Illegal Funding Of FG: The Key Question CBN Governor, Emefiele, Failed To Answer - Politics - Nairaland

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Illegal Funding Of FG: The Key Question CBN Governor, Emefiele, Failed To Answer by ivandragon: 6:38am On Sep 28, 2017
In apparent response to an exclusive report by PREMIUM TIMES, the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Godwin Emefiele, on Tuesday scrambled to defend his bank’s huge funding of the federal government.


This newspaper had published a report on Monday detailing the CBN’s massive financing of the federal government in clear contravention of the bank’s own rules.


But in his explanation, Mr. Emefiele claimed the CBN was not overfunding the federal government. He, however, did not provide statistical backing for his claim.


He simply said, “On over-funding of the federal government, let me state categorically that the CBN has not over-funded the federal government.


“The government had, on its own, decided that all its funds in banks, both local and foreign currencies, should be moved into the TSA at the CBN.


“If a customer of a bank has fixed deposits in an account and needs some spontaneous financing to meet his obligations, his commercial bank can allow him overdraw his account temporarily. That is what is happening.”


But this newpaper’s analysis of the CBN’s governor’s claims indicate that Mr. Emefiele failed to address the major crux of the story — that of overshooting the lending threshold allowed by the CBN Act and the illegality of the bank’s action.


From December 2016, according to a member of the bank’s Monetary Policy Committee, Adedoyin Salami, the CBN has variously made cash available to the federal government running into trillions, mostly beyond legal thresholds.


He said the CBN’s claims on the federal government under the period amounts to N814billion, which is “twentyfold higher” than what the law allows.


Ironically, the claim of commercial banks, he said, “rose marginally by 0.4% to N4.6 trillion”.


Another route through which the CBN pumped money to the government, Mr. Salami said, was via the bank’s N454 billion spending on purchase of government’s treasury bills, which he said, rose by 30 percent.


The government’s overdrafts from the apex bank also rose to N2.8 trillion within the period, representing a five percent increase.


But the sharpest rise in the figures, according to Mr. Salami, was in the government’s “mirror account” liabilities, which rose “from N3 billion at the end of 2016 to N1.5 trillion in April 2017”.


Authorities at the CBN are yet to contradict Mr. Salami’s figures.


A look at the CBN Act 2007 show that the huge direct financing of the federal government is in contravention of the law.


Although Section 38 (1) of the Act empowers the bank to grant “temporary advances to the Federal Government in respect of temporary deficiency of budget revenue” subsection 2 of the same section stipulates that “the amount of such advances outstanding shall not at any time exceed five per cent of the previous year’s actual revenue of the Federal Government”.


Additionally, subsection three of the section provides that such advances should be paid “as soon as possible and shall in any event be repayable by the end of the Federal Government financial year in which they are granted and if such advances remain unpaid at the end of the year, the power of the Bank to grant such further advances in any subsequent years shall not be exercisable, unless the outstanding advances have been repaid”.


By the estimated N6 trillion earned by the government last year, the CBN should have only granted advances to the federal government not exceeding N300 billion, representing five percent of the earnings.


But in his rationalisation of his bank’s actions, Mr. Emefiele failed to explain why the CBN exceeded the lending threshold allowed by the law.


He also failed to explain why a fleeting, operational account such as the Treasury Single Account would be a basis to lend to government beyond legal limit.


A former governor of the CBN and an ex-deputy governor of the bank had described the apex bank’s action as “reckless and illegal”.


They argued that that kind of monetary policy could only set the Nigerian economy up for a big fall.


https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/244360-illegal-funding-fg-key-question-cbn-governor-emefiele-failed-answer.html
Re: Illegal Funding Of FG: The Key Question CBN Governor, Emefiele, Failed To Answer by ivandragon: 8:04pm On Sep 28, 2017
clear evidence that this regime is ruining the country & no one wants to say anything?

interesting...

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