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How Nigerian Banks Rob The Poor - Crime - Nairaland

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How Nigerian Banks Rob The Poor by VOICEOFDIVINE: 4:59pm On Nov 22, 2019
How Nigerian Banks Rob the Poor

BY DR. OLUFUNMILAYO
'I have lived in UK a few years now and NEVER has my bank ever charged me one penny for bank transfer.
NEVER. NOT ONCE.

I’m sorry. But that 52 naira 50kobo that Nigerian banks deduct per transaction, what exactly is it for?

Why is no one speaking out against this blatant fraud?

Next is the fraudulent “Card Maintenance Fees” by our Nigerian banks. Please how are you maintaining a card that lives in my wallet?

I have about 3-4 UK Bank Cards here. Both credit cards and debit cards.
I have NEVER paid any such thing as a “Card Maintenance Fee”.
NEVER EVER.

The Nigerian Banking Sector is an unfortunately over-bloated industry that thrives on systemically entrenched policies that terribly defrauds us Nigerians and lives on cheating the average citizen of the hard earned money that is entrusted in their care to help save and invest.

You want to send money to someone from your Nigerian bank account and you first have to plan an extra 52 naira 50kobo.

Money that is electronically sent from one Nigerian bank account to another Nigerian bank account

What exactly is the charges for?
Why is this fraud tolerated?

Someone said the charges goes to NIPOST. I want to believe it is mere trolling as it makes absolutely no sense.

Please, How is Nipost involved in an ELECTRONIC money transfer?
Did I put the money in an envelope and post it? Or what?

We deserve better.
This is systemic cruelty.

When I applied for ATM Cards in UK (both debit and credit), I was NEVER charged a penny.
The card is given free.
And “maintenance”, if there’s any such thing, is done free.

IF we never get the chance to see how things happen in other places, we won’t know we are being cheated.

When I applied for an ATM Card in Nigeria, I was charged 1,000 naira plus VAT 50 naira to have one.
And I’m being charged some extra regularly in the pretence of an imaginary “Card Maintenance Fees”.

This is systemic corruption and a fundamental banking fraud aimed at impoverishing us Nigerians.

Let’s do a little maths, dear friends.

According to NIBSS, as at December 2017, there was almost 65,000 daily Electronic Fund Transfers in 2017.

At 52.50 naira per transaction, that’s over 3 million naira a day.
And about 1 billion naira a year.

Should this fraud continue?'

Bank will send you birthday text and seasons greeting and still charge you for it.

.�

Re: How Nigerian Banks Rob The Poor by Nobody: 5:51pm On Nov 22, 2019
The bank charges are even lower now. Transfer charge used to be N52.50 while COT used to be N3/mille but now N1/mille.

But we should rather complain about the government that now charges:

N50 stamp duty for every deposit above N1,000 into current accounts

N50 on every POS transactions above N50

3% charge on Cash deposit/ withdrawal above N500k

Extra 2.5% VAT on bank charges (loading..)

Though I'm not defending the banks, I believe the problem derived from appointment of people with interest/investment in the banking sector to head the CBN.


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