The
Federal Government has proposed an amendment to the Foreign-Exchange Act to
enable the imprisonment of anyone who holds foreign currencies, especially
the dollar, for more than 30 days. This is the latest measure the government
and the Central Bank of Nigeria are considering to stem the volatility in the
exchange rate and bolster the ailing naira, according to a Bloomberg report.
In the new proposals, which were published on the website of the Nigerian Law
Reform Commission last week, the CBN is seeking the power to control capital
flows and stop people from taking forex out of the country. According to the
draft amendment of the Foreign Exchange Act, anybody holding dollars in cash
for more than 30 days risk a jail term for as long as two years or a fine of
20 per cent of the amount.Regulators should also be able to prevent money
being repatriated “in accordance with the terms and conditions as may be
prescribed by the central bank from time to time,” the draft states.The
existing law is “narrow in scope and prohibits the seizure, forfeiture or
expropriation of imported money by the government without providing for
exceptions,” it adds.The amendments, according to the document, are necessary
“for effective monitoring and control, and to ensure probity in foreign
exchange transactions in Nigeria.” The CBN has increased capital controls
since the price of oil, Nigeria’s main foreign exchange earner, started
crashing in the second half of 2014.It had pegged the naira for 15 months
until June this year, a move analysts blamed for causing investors to flee
the country, the economy to contract in the first half of the year and the
inflation rate to rise to an 11-year high. The latest move will further worry
foreign investors, according to a Lagos-based research and investment
advisory firm, SBM Intelligence. The Department of State Security officials
had last week arrested some black market forex dealers for exchanging the
naira at a rate weaker than 400 per dollar, compared with the existing street
rate of around 460. The naira-dollar official exchange rate, which analysts
accused the CBN of still manipulating, is 315 against the greenback. “The CBN
wants to take its regulatory onus to frightening proportions,” analysts at
SBM said in an e-mailed note in response to the new draft law. “The move
smacks of desperation and can only result in negative investor perception and
capital flight,” they added. The Acting Director, Corporate Communications,
CBN, Mr. Isaac Okorafor, said the apex.” Source:
Punch
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Monday, November 21, 2016
FG proposes jail term for dollar hoarders
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