Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/bcm/src/dev/www/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121
Coins | Zikoko!
  • Can You Still Spend Naira Coins in Nigeria?

    Nigeria often feels like a simulation. We’re barely two months into the new year, but the government has put us through enough suffering to need years of therapy. 

    For weeks, Nigerians have been struggling with Naira scarcity due to the CBN’s Naira redesign, affecting ₦200, ₦500, and ₦1,000 notes. In this time, people have explored crazy options to get their hands on the Naira, and POS agents have shown us that cash is power. 

    [newsletter type=”gov”] 

    And while the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Supreme Court are stuck in a power play over the Naira swap deadline, some commercial banks, exhausted from the smoke they’ve been getting lately, have started issuing Naira coins to customers.

    Photo Credit: Twitter/Mayeni Jones(@MayeniJones)

    This, of course, brings the important question: 

    Are coins still a legal tender in Nigeria?

    According to the CBN Act Section 2, Naira coins are still Nigeria’s legal tender. Our currency structure is made up of three coin denominations: 50 kobo, ₦1 and ₦2, and eight banknotes denominations: ₦5, ₦10, ₦20, ₦50, ₦100, ₦200, ₦500 and ₦1000. 

    Why haven’t the Naira coins been in circulation?

    In 2007, the CBN redesigned the ₦1 and 50 kobo coins and issued the ₦2 coins. However, these coins had almost no value due to Nigeria’s ever-present inflation problem. 

    In March 2022, the House of Representatives asked the CBN to reinforce the use of coins to help stabilise our economy, but nothing came out of it. 

    However, by the look of things, the Naira coins might be making a return to our currency scene. While coins are legal and Nigerians can spend them, don’t judge filling station attendants when they stone you with your bags of coins.

    Join the Citizen Situation Room and Helpline on WhatsApp today, to get real-time gist and drama on the 2023 elections.

    [newsletter type=”gov”]

  • Lawmakers Are Bringing Back Coins to “Stabilise the Economy”. And No, It’s Not Bitcoin

    Kobo and naira coins in Nigeria must feel like the introvert that withdraws to a corner of the party to watch everyone else have fun. In fact, talking about coins as legal tender in Nigeria feels like time-travelling back to 2007 when Obasanjo was still president and sardine wasn’t a luxury item. So, why are kobo and naira coins back in the news?

    Kobo and naira coins are making a comeback

    What’s old?

    In 2007, the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) at the time, Charles Soludo, rebranded and reissued ₦1 and 50 kobo coins and introduced ₦2 coins.

    The Bank expended a huge budget in sensitisation and advocacy for Nigerians to use them, but commercial banks and citizens were not feeling them.

    Kobo and naira coins have grown over time to have low purchasing power in the markets, which means trying to sell them to Nigerians is like mining snow in the desert. 

    Kobo and naira coins are making a comeback

    In 2012, another CBN governor, Lamido Sanusi, announced a proposed currency restructuring exercise that was codenamed “Project CURE (Currency Restructuring)”. The project was the Bank’s attempt to respond to the changing needs of the economy and to stay on top of evolving trends. 

    When he announced the project, Sanusi admitted that Nigerians didn’t seem to care for coins. What was his cure for that problem? More coins!

    Sanusi said the CBN would coin ₦5, ₦10 and ₦20 and put them in circulation in 2013. The proposed currency lineup looked like this:

    Kobo and naira coins are making a comeback

    President Goodluck Jonathan killed Project CURE in September 2012, else you’d be buying gala right now with coins. Jonathan asked the CBN to pause the project, and nothing was ever heard of it ever again.

    What’s new?

    The House of Representatives passed a motion on Tuesday, March 22nd 2022 urging the CBN to reinforce the use of kobo and naira coins as legal tender in Nigeria. Honourable Muda Lawal Umar sponsored the motion and pleaded that the coins shouldn’t be allowed to go extinct.

    His motion argued, “Injecting low denominations into the economy will go a long way in curbing price inflation and stabilising the economy.”

    And by that argument, we imagine he means something like this: 

    ALSO READ: You Only Need Three Things at Nigerian Police Checkpoints

    Who needs kobo and naira coins?

    Some economists consider the absence of kobo and naira coins in circulation one of the reasons for Nigeria’s struggles with inflation. For example, if a low-priced item increases its price today, it’d have to go from, say, ₦5 to ₦10. But if coins are available, they could slow down that inflation rate, as the item would likely first increase to ₦6 or ₦7 instead of just jumping to ₦10.

    But Nigerians’ history with coins has shown they’re unlikely to hook up with them again. Who wants to risk being stoned with coins by an angry bus conductor? Or go around like a walking alarm bell? Also, you can’t do this with coins:

    Kobo and naira coins are making a comeback

    What will happen with this new motion?

    The House Committee on Banking and Currency has been charged with ensuring the CBN complies with the motion on reinforcing the use of kobo and naira coins. This entails communication to the Bank that’s currently under the leadership of Godwin Emefiele.

    Since he was appointed CBN governor in 2014, Emefiele’s not messed with the natural order of things for coins.

    Kobo and naira coins are making a comeback

    The only coin he’s interested in is Bitcoin and how to ban it. It’s unlikely this new motion will lead to anything meaningful.

    ALSO READ: Can a Court Sack a Nigerian Governor for Being a Traitor?