Central Bank governor Dr Patrick Njoroge holding the new banknotes at a
press conference on May 3, 2019 in Nairobi. FILE PHOTO | NMG
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has remained tight-lipped on why
there is a shortage of the new currency, which has left banks confused.
A
number of bank officials, who spoke on anonymity citing CBK’s “heavy
handedness” on the sector, said they started experiencing shortages from
the second week after configuring their automated teller machines
(ATMs). This has forced them to go back to the old currency notes that
they have been mopping from the market.
The Kenya
Bankers Association (KBA) said some lenders were experiencing temporary
shortages and other operational challenges, but added that they should
be fixed as soon as the CBK supplies them with the new currency.
“The
old notes are still legal tender and we shall continue operations side
by side. Where there are shortages, nothing stops them from dispensing
the old notes,” Mr Habil Olaka, KBA chief executive, told Sunday Nation
on phone.
“These are just some operational hitches but I
do not expect that banks will still be dispensing the old notes come
August and September,” he said.
CBK has refused to
comment on why there is a shortage of the new currency, a scenario that
has left banks, especially in towns far away from Nairobi, helpless.
Other players in the sector said the other challenge has been
training. They said the regulator started training them a week after the
announcement.
“We are using the train-the-trainers approach, where we train some trainers who go and train the rest,” Mr Olaka explained.
With
banks having reverted to the old currency, it means that some of the
money that has been withdrawn from the market is being returned into
circulation, making it a zero-sum game.
The CBK caught
the country by surprise during the June 1 Madaraka Day celebrations,
when it announced that it was withdrawing Sh1,000 notes in a bid to deal
with counterfeits and money laundering. The regulator announced that
the Sh1,000 note would cease to be legal tender from October 1.
Days after the announcement, commercial banks said they had started configuring their ATMs to start dispensing the new currency.
It
was expected that once the banks configured their machines, they would
dispense only the new notes to speed up the currency replacement
process, and the returning of the old notes to CBK. Kenya has about
1,700 ATM machines, 780 commercial bank branches and 66,000 bank agents
countrywide.
KBA asked banks, bank agents and
retailers, as well as citizens, to be vigilant during the transition
period as there may be attempts to launder illicit funds through the
banking system.
The CBK told reporters at an earlier
briefing that it had put in place mechanisms to ensure that all goes as
planned and has maintained that it will not extend the October 1
deadline.
As the clock ticks, those with stolen or ill-gotten cash have less than three months to spend it or exchange it with new notes.
Kenya
is not the first country to walk down this path. India scrapped 500 and
1,000-rupee bank notes in 2016 to flush out tax evaders. However, this
did not get the desired effects as 99 per cent of the money still got
back into the system.
A debt-ridden Nigeria introduced
new currency and banned the old notes in 1984, under the Muhammadu
Buhari government. But this caused chaos and was blamed on the inflation
that followed that crashed the country’s economy.
Ghana
attempted a similar move in 1982 when it ditched its 50 cedis note to
deal with rampant tax evasion and excess liquidity. It had the downside
of fuelling a currency black market.
There have been at least five success stories where the exercise worked for the economy and resulted in the intended outcomes.
These
include Pakistan (2016), the United Kingdom (2002), Australia (1996),
and the European Union (2002). Zimbabwe attempted it in 2015 and it is
the only African country that partially succeeded, given the fact that
it went for the US dollar, a stable currency that is regulated far from
home.
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