CBN has lamented over the poor repayment of the apex bank loans provided to the public.
EKO HOT BLOG reports that the Deputy Governor (Financial System Stability Directorate) of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Aishah Ahmad, has expressed concerns over the poor repayment of loans provided by the apex bank.
Aishah, while speaking at the 2022 Retreat for the Development Finance Department in Abuja, noted that the poor repayment of the loans might affect the sustainability of the CBN’s initiatives.
The Deputy Governor took the opportunity to charge beneficiaries of the apex loans to pay back so that others could benefit from the loan.
Aishah speaking at the event, said, “In recent years, the efforts and interventions of the CBN have ushered in a lot of growth and impact.
“It helped us combat extreme poverty, food insecurity and grow the agricultural sector and manufacturing base.
“But it also brings in considerations and we are well aware of these considerations. Of course, the most obvious is the risk of poor recovery rate on some of the loans we give out, which may be a burden on the institution, but most importantly may affect the sustainability of our initiatives.
“We also try to empathise with all stakeholders that all of these are loans and not grants. It is important you pay back so that others can also get the same opportunity.”
A booklet distributed during the retreat showed that the CBN had disbursed a total of N9.71tn through various interventions to different sectors.
A breakdown showed that the manufacturing/industry sector had the highest allocation of 32.6 percent.
It was followed by energy/infrastructure and agriculture with 23.1 percent and 22.8 percent allocations, respectively.
The Director, Development Finance Department, Philip Yusuf, while speaking at the event, said that the CBN had been at the forefront of food security in the country.
He also said that although some people had raised concerns over the rising food inflation, the CBN interventions had said the country from famine.
He said, “For those looking at food inflation to discredit the work we have done in the development finance department, I just want to tell them that Nigeria is part of a global financial system and can be prone to global shocks.
“With the rising price of food, we would have faced severe famine if not for our interventions, and the agric-value chain has witnessed tremendous progress because of our interventions which we believe has set Nigeria is on the part of sustainable food sufficiency.”
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