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Senate Summons CBN Governor on Bank Fees; NIPOST’s Lucrative Stamp Duty

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CBN Governor

The Nigerian Senate is inviting the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor to explain the amalgam of fees in the banking industry. Everything you do, there is a fee in the industry. It is extremely unfortunate that our banks have innovated excellently on extracting fees from customers at scale. Yet, I must note that some of those fees are not kept by banks; government is part of the party. Case in point: stamp duty fee for electronic transaction!

The Senate on Wednesday asked its committees on Banking, Insurance & other Financial Institutions and Finance to invite the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, to explain why its approved official charges are skewed in favour of banks as against ordinary bank customers.

The committees are also to investigate the propriety of ATM Card maintenance charges in comparison with international best practices and report back to the Senate.

These resolutions were sequel to a motion sponsored by Gbenga Ashafa (APC, Lagos East) on “Illicit and Excessive Charges by Nigerian Banks on customers account with particular focus on Automated Teller Machine (ATM) Maintenance and Withdrawal Charges.”

Mr Ashafa noted there have been several complaints from Nigerians generally and on social media concerning illicit and excessive charges by commercial banks on customers’ account with particular focus on ATM maintenance charges and ATM withdrawal charges.

I have written extensively that the clusters of bank fees are actually part of the reasons why the financial inclusion is not working as designed. When an average customer spends around N300 to N500 in a month on fees, you would get the idea why some Nigerians run away from banks.

But in Nigeria, there are many entries on all kinds of fees. I used to work in the bank in Lagos. But then, it was Commission on Turnover (COT) – this is the fee, the bank imposes on your account for actually withdrawing your money. I have called it one of the most ingenious products that propelled the new banking era in Nigeria. Without COT, there will not be many new generation banks. They offered better services than the dinosaurs of the older banks, but needed to monetize the obvious preferences of their services in order to invest in technology and new operational models. Customers knowing the value in better service did not complain. The COT provided easy cash and they triumphed, took market share from old banks. So, even if they do not make loans to earn interests, provided that customers are coming and withdrawing money, they would make money. That is a setup that will never fail. They bring the customers with efficient services and then charge fees on their accounts as they do transactions.

Get me right, the fees are actually a better deal if you are a middle class with change. It is far cheaper to save your one hour to watch Zee World by parting with N52 which you may pay as a fee to send money electronically. But that N52 does not come easily to many Nigerians. That is the reason why our financial inclusion remains low, according to some numbers from NIBSS (Nigeria Interbank Settlement System). Yes, Katsina has about 4% banking penetration using BVN (Bank Verification Number) data which is the most reliable in the nation.

The Bank Fees

According to the piece by Premium Times which was refereed above, the maintenance fees charged by banks on card maintenance stand at N600 per year as contained in “Guide to Charges by Banks and other Financial Institutions” which CBN published. It used to be N100 per year.

Of course the most troubling fee is the N65 which happens when one uses an out-of-network ATM from the 4th time in a month. In other words, there is no fee for the first three uses for any 3rd party ATM but once that is exceeded, any subsequent use attracts N65. While that fee is disclosed, the problem here is that some banks do rig the system by making sure people pay that fee not necessarily by choice. These are issues the consumer protection watchdog should be dealing with in the nation.

Mr Ashafa also expressed worry that most banks have deliberately manipulated their ATM not to dispense more that N10,000 per withdrawal in some cases and in most cases not more than N20,000.

“This is a deliberate ploy to manipulate the ATM machines which are ordinarily manufactured to dispense as much as N40, 000 per transaction, in order to attract more bank charges from customers who are forced to carry out more transactions due to the manipulated machines.

“It appears the CBN is becoming insensitive to the plight of Nigerians who are already complaining of excessive charges by commercial banks. If the CBN is trying to encourage a cashless Nigeria, why should they be making it more difficult and expensive for Nigerians to do transactions,” he said.

Of course while the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) has been going after DStv, protecting the interest of rich Nigerians who can afford shows, the real ordinary Nigerians are not protected by CPC when it comes to bank fees. The banking fees are more urgent issues than what DStv does with its pricing: we can live without DStv but there is no nation without banking!

MultiChoice
CPC should focus more on bank fees on all Nigerians over pursuing fees DStv is charging Nigerian middle class.

For most Nigerians, you cannot charge them N1,200 for card issuance or renewal and then collect another N600 yearly on top of that. And whenever they make a transfer, there is a stamp duty for an electronic transaction. In all these cases, the customer cannot opt out because the alternative, using tellers is even more expensive. So, due to these fees, the only thing most poor customers do is to stop banking and use their pillows to store the little money they have. That may not be the expected thing CBN had hoped for, but its policies and what the banks are doing are simply enabling such decisions across the nation.

NIPOST Stamp Duty

The Federal Government of Nigeria is planning to privatize Nigerian Postal Services (NIPOST). I expect the price tag to be at least N100 billion. Why? Provided the electronic stamp duty remains in the Act, there would be no risk for buying NIPOST. You can recover at least N40 billion from its real estate across Nigeria. The balance will come from stamp duty which banks help you collect as Nigerians make electronic transactions daily.

The Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) on Thursday announced plans to generate N400 billion from the privatisation and concession of six Federal Government enterprises, including Afam Power, NIPOST and four others this year.  The N400 billion, according to BPE, is part of its  funding for the 2018 budget, which it ought to generate.

Yes, you just wait for banks to send you N50 for any electronic transaction as stamp duty. The good news is that you do not even have to print any stamp since the “stamp” now is digital. This is how lucrative NIPOST is: it is making money without having to move any package because Nigerians pay for stamps which are electronically issued!

What transactions attract 50 Naira Stamp Duty Charge
All received credit alerts to your bank account (current or savings) attracts a 50 Naira stamp duty charge.
The Receiver pays the 50 Naira, not the sender. So you don’t get charged stamp duty for debit transactions.

Where does all revenue from Stamp Duty Charges go
All stamp duty charges collected by Deposit money banks and other financial institutions are paid into the Nigeria Postal Service (NIPOST) collection account with the Central Bank of Nigeria 3000047517.
What the federal government chooses to do with this new revenue stream is yet to be established.

All Together

Nigeria needs to reform fees which banks and the government charge bank customers if the nation ever hopes to move the needle on financial inclusion. You do not expect extremely price-sensitive citizens to not factor these fees into considerations as they decide to join the industry. Yes, those fees could be discouraging the very people the government wants to attract into the banking sector. For someone making N18,000 monthly and having to part with N300-N500 on fees and associated SMS charges, it could be a disincentive to bank.

How to WIN more Consulting Engagements

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When do you know when to waive the opportunity to send invoice to a client? And when do you know how to intermittently freeze sending invoices to a long-term client? And when do you offer your structures to help your clients save money by relying on your systems? And when was the last time you brought a business to your client?

There is a clear advantage on running a consulting boutique not tethered to big global consulting firms: freedom to innovate on relationship building. Building a business relationship and making yourself a trusted ally would not happen overnight: you must earn any trust by investing in your clients, demonstrating that you want them to WIN.

Do not make money to anchor your advisory engagements: focus on value to be created to that client. If you do that, you would have a separation from competitors. Yes, it is incumbent on you to demonstrate why you are unique and demand to be paid by perhaps more experienced business legends. If they see the value to be created, the vaults will open, for you. When companies are looking for business insights, they know they would pay. But just as they are “confused” [they do not have all the answers], they would not like to retain and pay for “confusion”. That is why inertia exists to just hire: they want certainty on the value to be expected.

Interestingly, the easiest way is to start working even before the client finalizes on some issues, if that opportunity is possible. Send a roadmap with clarity on how you would go about fixing the business friction. Before the client knows it, you have something on the table. I know many people are fearful of others stealing their knowledge; I have always seen that concern as pure ignorance. If people can steal your ideas through a written document, you have nothing to offer at a deeper level! If you do not get out of that thinking, you would not even have a way to demonstrate capability before clients.

As you work, you must make efforts to understand the pain points, working to fix the main friction in that business. As you design roadmap, present what I have called Unification of Three: a concatenation of World, Africa and Nigeria. Then posit why your client in Nigeria will win with a specific action plan. You can only build confidence in that client if you demonstrate you have a clear understanding of the world and the continent even though the game would be played in Nigeria. Do not give him the opportunity to remind you what they are doing in New York and Kenya: offer them and then architect a roadmap taking into considerations the local terrains and realities in Nigeria.

Numbers matter but I can assure you that what is really catalytic is measuring the important things. Yes, do not be too fixated on capturing every metric. Find ways to know what matters. How do you grow or help that client scale? My message is to watch the marginal cost and from that elemental business component of scalable advantage, develop a model. If you miss it, you will never scale.

No matter what the engagement is – think growth because at the end every firm wants to grow. Do not limit your imagination on the written scope for the sake of it – liberate and while adhering to scope, find vistas to unlock value for your client.

There are things that bring more engagements – one of the key is making clients WIN and that is simply GROW. If you do not have a game plan on how clients can grow, go and acquire the capability and return. Yes, without the growth capability, no one will remember you afterwards, as the clients did not experience moments after your encounters. By looking at the end goal, even an IT engagement will be correlated to business objectives. By linking all those nexus, you become a trusted ally who can figure out how technology expands the business and not just IT department.

Have a great week ahead.

Comment from LinkedIn

You cannot manufacture a car by simply reading a book with a title: How To Manufacture Car. What makes the engine to come alive is not in that book, it’s located somewhere else. Same goes for ideas that can be stolen, the originality of such ideas is obviously debatable.

If you can bring universal problem to specifics, and tailor it down to client’s challenge; and on the other hand, can extrapolate specific challenge to solve universal problems, you will remain eternally relevant.

At the end of the day, it boils down to EXECUTION. It’s not so much about what was said and how it was said, but rather who acted on what was said, and the level of conviction and enthusiasm therein.

Like the Divine Master admonished in the holy book: Go and Do Same!

Ethiopia Rises with Emerging Visa Policy of free Movement of Africans

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Let’s commend Ethiopia for its evolving visa policy: any African can get visa on arrival. That is a message everyone needs to hear – Ethiopia is open for business and investment.

Ethiopia is taking the dream of free movement in Africa one step further.

The country will soon allow African citizens to enter without obtaining visas in advance, president Mulatu Teshome told parliament on Monday (Oct. 8). The move follows the decision in June by new prime minister Abiy Ahmed to start issuing online visas for tourists and visitors coming from all over the world. Currently, all travelers, except those from Kenya and Djibouti, have to get a visa before departure or receive it on arrival.

When I wrote a piece few years ago in Harvard Business Review, titled “Africa is Open for Business”, I was hoping for a moment like this. Yes, it was sheer stupidity to claim that you were open for business when your neighbors could not even enter your country. Ethiopia got the memo and the redesign is happening.

But, Africa is not an isolated island in the world, and ongoing uncertainty with some of its trading partners could imperil any sustainable progress. A trade shock is just around the corner, as the continent remains reliant on a mineral-based economy. And new, rosy economic statistics have not managed to stop strikes, riots, and other protests, which are the result of the continued reality of economic inequality. What’s more, Africa is complex, fragmented and multicultural. What works in Nigeria is not guaranteed to work in Kenya.

If the Western World makes us to dance atilogwu, ekombi, sheka, makosa, etc, before giving us visas, Africa must do better.

As Tanzania restricts movement and South Africa prefers Chinese and Indians on their visa policies, Ethiopia is showing while it is emerging as the true unity spot of Africa. Addis Ababa will simply grow as foreign entities make it a destination if the liberal visa policy stays.

Nigeria needs to learn how the competitiveness of Ethiopia will affect our capacity to continue to grow. We need to advance our policies because if people can easily enter Ethiopia, capital will follow. Yes, when you have the best continental airline, and people can easily enter your country, you have closed all the flanks. Nigeria’s visa policy has to evolve as part of Ease of Doing business.

The ease of getting visa is always correlated with flow of capital. Angola is one of the toughest African countries to get a visa, and it remains among the farthest. Yes, Angola remains largely forgotten.

Emerging Opportunities: Agro-Financing, Savings, Insurtech, Credit Scoring & Lending

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  Agro-Financing Farmers make up 70% of Africa’s workforce. However, many smallholder farmers are operating at a fraction of their potential capacity. Africa contains 60% of the world’s non-cultivated arable land, yet African governments spend $35 billion annually on food imports. A major hurdle for African farmers is a lack of access to agriculture finance: financial services that allow […]

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One Year After, Africa’s Sankofa Innovation Sold Well

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Free for all Mini-MBA edition 2 participants

It is amazing as reviews come back very POSITIVE on my book – Africa’s Sankofa Innovation – which is going to be a required textbook next spring in a U.S. university. I want to thank you all and the hundreds who paid $20 to subscribe. We hit close to $50k via Tekedia subscriptions and sales on Amazon. I am confident by 2021, this hobby can grow to $250k.

I have asked team to transfer the funds to African Institution of Technology, a tax-exempt charity. By policy, we do not accept grants for our works. We simply do things that bring money to fund whatever we have in mind. My passion now is AI and helping schools deepen that capability. We have been in 102 African universities (see photos). Yes, the funds are available and more programs in schools.

I have shared some images of readers who shared great comments on their experiences. More books are coming: the Dangote System is super-awesome, and the Zenzeleni Innovation is a masterpiece. I have been writing while at airports and lobbies as I travel across Nigeria.

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