The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has issued a new and comprehensive set of guidelines governing agent banking operations across the country. The move, effective immediately, is aimed at tightening regulatory control, promoting financial system stability, and reinforcing consumer protection within the rapidly expanding financial inclusion ecosystem.
Agent banking—the provision of financial services to customers by authorized third-party agents on behalf of licensed financial institutions or mobile money operators—has been a cornerstone of Nigeria’s financial inclusion drive.
In a circular signed by Musa Jimoh, Director of the CBN’s Payments System Policy Department, on Monday, the apex bank stated that the new rules were designed to achieve several critical objectives: enhance service quality, protect consumers, promote financial inclusion, and ensure the stability and integrity of the financial system.
Key Policy Changes and What They Mean for Operators
The most significant change for the industry is the imposition of strict transaction limits, alongside a clearer delineation of responsibilities and mandatory operational standards.
1. Daily Transaction Limit (Crucial for Anti-Money Laundering)
New Limit: The CBN has set a strict daily cumulative transaction limit of ?1.2 million for any single customer utilizing an agent’s services.
Implication for Operators: This hard cap is a critical Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Counter-Financing of Terrorism (CFT) measure. It means agents must closely monitor and enforce daily aggregate transaction values (deposits, withdrawals, transfers) for individual customers. The policy compels institutions to tighten their monitoring systems and ensures that high-value transactions are pushed back into traditional banking channels.
2. Enhanced Due Diligence and Consumer Protection
Service Quality: The guidelines mandate that all licensed financial institutions (Principals) and Mobile Money Operators (MMOs) must ensure agents adhere to specified service standards.
Recourse Mechanism: The new rules solidify the requirements for clear and accessible customer complaints and redress mechanisms. Agents and their Principals are jointly responsible for resolving customer issues swiftly.
Agent Identity: The guidelines will likely require clearer signage and identification for agents, ensuring customers know precisely which Principal institution they are transacting with.
3. Operational and Financial Inclusion Goals
Agent Responsibilities: The policy clarifies the permissible and non-permissible activities for agents, focusing them on basic financial services (cash-in, cash-out, account opening, bill payments).
Financial Inclusion Boost: By formalizing and securing the environment, the CBN aims to build public confidence in agent banking, especially in remote and underserved areas, thereby deepening financial inclusion as intended.
System Stability: By setting defined limits and enforcing adherence to AML/CF
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