Central Bank governor Dr Patrick Njoroge holding the new banknotes at a
press conference on May 3, 2019 in Nairobi. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) yesterday unveiled the rules that will guide the replacement of the Sh1,000 notes, which account for 83 percent of the Sh540 billion in circulation or Sh217 billion.
- The Sh500 notes account for 5.9 percent, Sh200 (4.2 percent), Sh100 (4.8 per cent) and Sh50 (1.9 percent).
- This illustrates that the Sh1,000 note remains the currency king in Kenya, a position that has seen it favoured by those making fake money as well as those hiding illicit cash outside the banking system.
More than 80 percent of the value of Kenyan currency notes in
circulation will be withdrawn by October 1 following the introduction of
the new Sh1,000 notes in a move aimed at combating illicit financial
flows and counterfeiting.
However, older versions of
the smaller denominations will remain in circulation alongside the new
ones launched last Saturday, but after October 1, the older Sh1,000 note
will all become invalid.
The Central Bank of Kenya
(CBK) Monday unveiled the rules that will guide the replacement of the
Sh1,000 notes, which account for 83 percent of the Sh540 billion in
circulation or Sh217 billion. The Sh500 notes account for 5.9 percent,
Sh200 (4.2 percent), Sh100 (4.8 per cent) and Sh50 (1.9 percent).
This
illustrates that the Sh1,000 note remains the currency king in Kenya, a
position that has seen it favoured by those making fake money as well
as those hiding illicit cash outside the banking system.
“We
have assessed the grave concern that our large banknotes, particularly
the older one thousand shillings series, are being used for illicit
financial flows in Kenya and also other countries in the region,” said
Dr Patrick Njoroge, the CBK governor.
“Will this country become a country of thieves, (people who)
transact illicit flows that sort of get rich (quick) stuff? I would
submit that it is not,” he said yesterday.
The move to
demonetise the old Sh1,000 shilling banknote has triggered a legal
storm with two court petitions filed Monday challenging the new currency
because of the use of the statue of the founding president Mzee Jomo
Kenyatta in the notes with the petitioners arguing that it contravenes
the 2010 Constitution.
The law prohibits the use of portraits on currency notes but is silent on statues.
The petitioners have also accused the CBK of failing to involve the public before the notes were printed.
However,
Dr Njoroge Monday said the CBK will defend itself in the suit filed at
the High Court. He also said the actions so far taken by the regulator
were within the law.
Hitches
The
withdrawal of the old Sh1,000 notes will not be easy given that they
account for 83 percent of the value of cash in circulation and 40
percent of the currency in use, bankers have warned.
The bankers lobby -- Kenya Bankers Association (KBA) — said hitches are expected in the exchange of the notes.
“Anything
new will obviously have some operational hiccups. We are aware of this
and we are putting together a systematic way of identifying and dealing
with any challenges that may come up,” KBA chairman Habil Olaka told the
Business Daily.
Kenya had considered the lessons from
India’s 2016 move to scrap high-value currency notes, known as
demonetisation, hence the four-month window to give the public time to
exchange the old notes for new ones, Dr Njoroge said.
Under
the rules provided by the CBK, those seeking to exchange more than Sh5
million will require CBK approval where a basic assessment will be done
on the source of the money and its ownership before authorisation is
granted.
CBK said individuals in this category are
“very few”. Earlier in the year, CBK said less than one per cent of
Kenyans had bank deposits exceeding Sh1 million.
The central bank’s nod will also be required for those seeking to exchange at least Sh1 million if they have no bank accounts.
Those with less than Sh1 million and in need of the new currency
will be required to deal at bank branches or at the CBK if they do not
have accounts. But they will, however, need to have official
identification.
“For between Sh1 million to Sh5
million, you will need to go to your bank where they know you, your type
of business and they will still ask the usual questions and you sign
the usual declaration forms just like it has been done before,” Dr
Njoroge said.
“Those
who do not have bank accounts and want to exchange this amount will
need to contact the CBK. We will then endorse them and they can go to a
designated bank branch,” he said.
The governor said the
Central Bank has not quantified the volume of illicit flows, but noted
that there had been enough evidence to force authorities to act.
Regional use
“You
don’t wait until the house is really burning before you use the fire
extinguisher. When you begin to smell smoke, grab that fire extinguisher
and begin to deal with it,” he said.
Dr Njoroge said
there would be no turning back on the efforts to stem the flows from
money laundering, financing of terrorism and proceeds from crime.
Given
Kenya’s status as the most advanced economy in the region, the CBK will
co-ordinate the move to scrap the Sh1,000 banknotes with its
counterparts in the region, where the Kenyan currency is widely accepted
and used for payments.
“The illicit flows are spread
around neighbouring countries. The Kenyan currency is the regional US
dollar,” Dr Njoroge said. Dozens of Kenyan government officials and
business people have appeared in court since May 2018 on charges
relating to the alleged theft of hundreds of millions of shillings from
public coffers while others face money laundering charges.
Millions
in cash have been seized in their private residences and the State has
been forced to freeze more in bank deposits with some individuals on
less than Sh150,000 monthly pay transacting more than Sh1 billion in
three years.
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