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97% of Bank Balances in Nigeria Within N500,000 ($1,000) Balance

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Very interesting indeed: 97% of bank balances in Nigeria are within N500,000 of Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) insurance window. That means only 3% of bank accounts are not fully insured in the nation.

In the event of a bank failure, the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) stated that over 97 per cent of depositors at deposit money banks (DMBs) in the country would be completely protected by the N500,000 Maximum Insured Limit.

The Managing Director/ Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation, NDIC, Mr Bello Hassan stated this during the 2021 Finance Correspondents and Business Editors (FICAN) workshop organized by the Commission.

The NDIC’s maximum coverage limits of N500,000 per depositor in commercial, merchant, and non-interest banks, primary mortgage banks, and mobile money operators, as well as N200,000.00 per depositor in microfinance banks, remained the most adequate and robust in the world, according to the NDIC’s CEO.

The Worried Lender

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In the ancestral Igbo culture, the best person to borrow money from is your kinsman. There is a reason for that: if you cannot repay and he comes after your properties, he can take all, but at the same time, he has a fundamental responsibility to support your family because your children are partly his!

Igbos name their children Nwaoha (child of the community) and Adaoha (daughter of the community) to conceptualize that a child belongs to the community and not just the parents. And if the parents fail in their duties, the community has a responsibility to support. That is the spirit of Umunneona Economics and the power behind the Igbo apprenticeship system.

This takes me to the latest news that China wants to reduce its debts to Africa as the borrowers are struggling badly to service the debts. An Igbo axiom notes that if you are holding someone down on the ground, you are also likely to be on the ground to keep that person from standing! Simply, the lender and borrower have many things in common.

Wish for a time when Africa can afford to borrow internally just as America, China, Japan, etc do.

Yet, China should NOT be overly worried about Africa’s possible inability to repay. The real issue is that no one has explained how these loans have improved the common man in the continent. China should be worried about that!

While China has consistently doubled or even tripled its financing pledges for Africa during previous Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) meetings, the stagnation of this sum at the last FOCAC summit, held in 2018, should have raised concerns.

This year for the first time, the Asian giant has cut down investment pledges from $60 billion to $40 billion, at the recently concluded ministerial level FOCAC meetings held in Dakar, Senegal. This is a worrying sign of the times for the continent.

It’s easy to rationalize this drastic reduction as a result of China’s poor economic performance in the wake of the pandemic with China’s GDP growth at 2.3% in 2020, down from 6.0% in a pre-pandemic 2019, but this doesn’t tell the full story.

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Comment: Thanks a lot for sharing these very important thoughts. The last sentence got me – I believe it is the real issue. In your opinion, what aspect is more important to improve the common man: human capital or employment opportunities?

My Response: If you focus on “employment opportunities”, you become constrained in your policy playbook since employment does not come via fiat. It is an effect of something. Forget when politicians create an agency for creating employment. There is nothing like that unless expanding bureaucracy.

Human capital is fundamental for the advancement of nations and people. When the minds of people are liberated, they shape their future and those jobs will open up. That is why parents send their kids to school instead of taking them from one company to another looking for jobs for them.

 

Year 2022 must be the year of #smartworking

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Year 2022 must be the year of #smartworking

An Igbo proverb says that “ndu ka ihe eji azu ya” [life is bigger than whatever is required to sustain it]. I am never a believer that working all hours is a sign of productivity.

Find ways to get decent sleep, find time to recharge and uplift your spirit using whatever works for you.

If you take 5 minutes to plan your day in the morning or night before, you could save 90 minutes on daily routines . Make 2022 the year of #SmartWorking

Plan to improve the hourly rate, not just work more hours!

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Change the strategy in 2022 – focus to improve earning power over working ALL hours.

As 2022 arrives, focus  to improve how much you make per hour, not structuring your life to be working all hours. Working all hours will not make you rich but improving your hourly rate via mastering new skills will unlock a better future.

A professional certification can raise your hourly wage from $20 to $60 and that means you have saved 2 hours! When you improve the hourly rate, you compound earnings.

Plan to improve the rate, not just work more hours!

Who will be held responsible for Junior’s death?

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Junior, a pupil of Dowen College was allegedly tormented, coerced, bullied and beaten by his fellow students which led to his death. According to the parents of the dead kid, their son has been facing the ugly ordeal in the hands of his fellow students who are pressuring him to join the cult and kept bullying him for his refusal to join their cult. 

Whatever the case is, looking  at it from the ambit of the law and analyzing who the law will be held culpable for the death of the lad.

Firstly, the four boys who have been fingered to be responsible for the death of young Silvester will be held culpable for the murder. Though they are not up to 18 years which is the age of majority but the law is a child above the age of 7 can be held criminally responsible if they commit any crime. They can be arrested, detained and tried as adults as the offense they were alleged to have committed is the offense of murder. 

Murder as a crime is punishable by death sentence under the Nigerian law. So the four boys alleged to have been responsible for the death of Junior May be looking at the death sentence if they are tried and found guilty of the crime they are accused of.

Secondly, the school, Dowen College will be held strictly responsible also for the death of Junior. They will be charged with the case of Negligence which can either be criminal negligence or civil negligence. They may have the strict duty to protect, safeguard and guarantee the safety of every student under their care, this duty which they fail to discharge has made them culpable for the death of Junior and they will be made to pay heavily for it so as to also serve as a deterrent. 

Lastly, the staff of Dowen College will he held culpable too for the death of Junior. They will be joined in the suit for negligence as joinder for failing to discharge the duty of protection and safety of Junior. Under civil negligence, the school, Dowen College and the staff can be held vicariously liable for the death of the boy.