The plan to extend the use of Bank Verification Number (BVN) to customers of Microfinance banks appear to be long expected, going by the reactions of operators in the financial services sector to the planned introduction.
The
most celebrated benefits of the introduction of the Bank Verification
Number (BVN) and its strict enforcement by money deposit banks in the
country may have been the blocking of leakages in government revenue as
several thousands of ghost workers were discovered through the
initiative.
Other benefits include improved transparency in the process
of granting of bank facilities to customers among others as well as
helping the banks to sanitise their credit administration system and
curbing fraudulent practices outside of the public service.
At
the inception of the project, one of its proponent, Chief Executive
Officer of Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBBS) Mr. Ade Shonubi,
had explained that the purpose of it is to use biometric information as
a means of identifying and verifying all individuals that have
account(s) in any Nigerian bank and consequently, as a means of
authenticating customer’s identity at point of transactions.
Shonubi
had added that the BVN exercise would also provide a uniform
industrially-accepted unique identity for bank customers, to
authenticate transactions without the use of cards using only biometric
features and Personal Identity Number (PIN) identification of
blacklisted customers.
Today, many observers rated the exercise as a success on the strength of helping to block fraudulent siphoning of government finance with the discovery of several thousands of ghost workers particularly in the federal civil service.
The discovery and the subsequent blocking of such conduits had vindicated the concerns of many, including international consulting groups, who noted that corruption in the public sector was a drawback for government’s ability to fund capital projects and interventions in other critical sectors of the economy with potential to grow the economy further.
However,
the benefits transcend the public sector. A report released last year
by FBNQuest Research revealed that the rate of e-fraud in Nigeria in
terms of value reduced by 63 per cent in 2015, partly due to the
introduction of bank verification BVN project.
On
the Financial inclusion leg of it, the number of unbanked adult
Nigerians lags behind that of South Africa and Kenya leading to the
initiative being conceptualised. In 2010 for instance, only 36 per cent –
roughly 31 million out of an adult population of 84.7 million were
served by formal financial services, compared to 68 per cent in South
Africa and 41 per cent in Kenya. It was as a result of this that the CBN
and other stakeholders in October 2012 implemented a National Financial
Inclusion Strategy to decrease the number of Nigerians that are
excluded from financial services from 46.3 per cent to 20.0 per cent by
2020 as committed to in the Maya Declaration.
The New Directive
The
plan to extend the BVN regime to MFBs was contained in a communication
from the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun to the Governor of the
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Godwin Emefiele. It will be recalled
that the CBN had announced plans to extend the BVN exercise to MFBs in
September 2016.
In
the communication, Adeosun told the CBN governor that prior to the
deadline for obtaining the BVN by bank customers, a large number of
salary accounts of Federal employees were found to have been moved from
commercial banks to microfinance banks, which did not require the use of
BVN.
Further
justifying the rationale for the new policy thrust, Adeosun stated in
the memo that operating bank accounts in MFBs without requirement for
BVN has left a huge loophole for those, who hide and launder proceeds of
crime to escape detection by law enforcement agencies.
According
to her “Our on-going efforts to verify the integrity of Federal
Government personnel costs and purge the system of fraud and error has
made extensive use of the Bank Verification Number as a means of
identifying recipients of multiple salaries, and salaries paid into
accounts with names that differ from those held on our payroll records.
The success of this effort has to date yielded the removal of over
50,000 payroll entries,” the minister said.
Although
the minister said extending the requirement for BVN to microfinance
banks may impose a huge financial strain on the smaller microfinance
banks, the minister pointed out that, “Some MFBs, such as National
Police Force Microfinance (NPF), have over 27,000 salary accounts. Our
inability to perform checks on such a large number of salary earners is a
key risk.”
“I
am therefore seeking your co-operation to enforce compliance with BVN
on any MFB with over 200 active salary accounts, or those above a
certain size. This will support the Federal Government’s efforts at
reducing leakages to create headroom for the capital projects that will
support the growth of the economy,” the minister said.
Stakeholders’ Reactions
Stakeholders
who spoke to newsmen in separate interviews including the Managing
Director of FinaTrust Microfinance Bank, Mr. Deji Popoola, welcome the
initiative, pointing out that, it would help the MFBs with their credit
management system as it would also further deepen financial inclusion
in the banking sector.
Similarly,
a senior banker with one of the new generation banks, who preferred not
to be named, also welcomed the extension. According to him, “The
extension will strengthen the credit bureau and will check the
activities of habitual loan defaulters who now approach the MFBs because
of their bad records with the commercial banks.
“What
some bank customers with bad credit profile now do is to approach MFBs
for bank facilities because they couldn’t go to commercial banks because
their details can easily be retrieved through their BVN and the credit
bureaus whereas the MFBs don’t have those details,” he stated
anonymously.
Meanwhile,
who stated that, it is a right step in the right direction, posited
that, “When it is introduced, it will help the MFBs with their credit
administration and reduce incidence of bad loans because it will equip
the MFBs with details of bank customers. Besides it will help to deepen
financial inclusion. Since the whole essence of the financial inclusion
policy was to bring as many people as possible into the financial system
and considering that about 80 per cent of Nigerians live in the rural
areas where some MFBs operate it then makes sense to extend the BVN
initiative to that sector as it will further help to meet that
objective.”
Speaking
further, Popoola allayed fears that the introduction may not be well
received in the rural areas, arguing that, “The policy shouldn’t be
looked at on the short term, rather, customers of MFBs should be made to
see the benefits through awareness campaign using the radio and
television, and encouraged to enlist. They may be in the rural area
today and migrate to the cities tomorrow,” he reasoned.
THIS DAY
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