The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, on Thursday revealed a new government policy that would permit Nigerians who currently hold dollars outside the formal banking system to return those funds into the financial system.
Edun said such individuals have a nine-month period to comply with the directive without attracting legal liability or financial penalties.
The Finance Minister spoke after the National Economic Council meeting, chaired by Vice President Kashim Shettima, where update was given on the Excess Crude Account currently standing at $473,754.57, the Natural Resources Fund at ₦26,105,837,627.67, and the Stabilization Account at ₦36,299,452,763.62.
He said: “There is a release today through the Ministry of Finance, in conjunction with the Central Bank, a programme, starting October 31, and lasting nine months, that will allow people to bring in cash outside the banking system.
“So, it is unsafe and outside of legal limits. They will be allowed forbearance to bring dollars cash. Let me emphasise, it is to bring dollars that they are holding outside the system to be able to bring them in and credit it to their bank accounts, as long as it is not proceeds of crime, illicit money.”
There will be no penalty, there will be no taxes, there will be no questions.
“They just meet the normal Know Your Customer criteria of banks and they have an opportunity to bring in those funds, make them safe, make them secure, and make them available through normal, economic activity. The details of that, the guidelines of that, will be released, first of all, the announcement by the Ministry of Finance and the guidelines later will follow very quickly by Central Bank.
“That is an opportunity, not just for people who would normally like to comply, to be compliant with the laws and normal business practice, but of course, it gives us an opportunity to bring those dollars from where they are doing nothing to where they are within the financial system, they add to our reserves, and of course can help with the exchange rate.” (Guardian)