Business
Body Seeks Collaboration In Budget Monitoring
A civil society organisation (CSO) has advocated the use of constructive engagement in ensuring that funds appropriated in government budgets for the execution of capital projects are properly deployed.
A Senior Economist/Executive Director of Citizens for Justice, Employment and Transparency (C-JET), Mr. Victor Anyanwu, made this call during a fiscal responsibility session for the South South geo-political zone which held at Taland Place, D-Line, Port Harcourt, last Monday.
He said that while governments may often mean well for the citizenry in their policies and programmes, the exigencies, diversities and enormity of competing demands can make the outcomes from actual operations of governance fall short of the people’s expectations.
“Civil society organizations have a responsibility to both anticipate and highlight such underperformances by engaging the officials, ministries and agencies of governments in collaborative relations on how to minimize the incidence of such systemic limitations.
“Improvements in service delivery and people’s welfare should be an overriding consideration in such engagements,” he added.
Anyanwu decried the attitude of public servants who are often unwilling to allow for external accountability, as most of them detest any monitoring or measurement of their activities and performances.
He urged governments, especially those of the South South states, to always post their yearly budgets on the Internet for easier accessibility rather than the present system of asking any intending users to apply for copies of such public documents.
Speaking earlier, the Lead Director of Citizens Welfare Platform (CWP) and one of the main organisers of the workshop, Barrister Eze Onyekpere, had identified corruption and fiscal rascality by politicians as reasons for the high incidence of tax avoidance among Nigerians.
He cited the case of Ghana with its growing economy and sound infrastructure, but whose annual budget is hardly up to the sum of Lagos and Rivers States’ budgets.
Onyekpere attributed Ghana’s success to fiscal discipline on the part of public office holders and active participation of the citizens in monitoring the budget implementation process.
According to him, Nigeria has enough resources to achieve all the targets she had been setting for herself prior to 2000, including the UN’s Millennium Development Goals by 2015, if only the leadership will exercise some restraint in boom bursts and other wasteful expenditures.
Ibelema Jumbo
Business
FIRS Clarifies New Tax Laws, Debunks Levy Misconceptions
Business
CBN Revises Cash Withdrawal Rules January 2026, Ends Special Authorisation
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has revised its cash withdrawal rules, discontinuing the special authorisation previously permitting individuals to withdraw N5 million and corporates N10 million once monthly, with effect from January 2026.
In a circular released Tuesday, December 2, 2025, and signed by the Director, Financial Policy & Regulation Department, FIRS, Dr. Rita I. Sike, the apex bank explained that previous cash policies had been introduced over the years in response to evolving circumstances.
However, with time, the need has arisen to streamline these provisions to reflect present-day realities.
“These policies, issued over the years in response to evolving circumstances in cash management, sought to reduce cash usage and encourage accelerated adoption of other payment options, particularly electronic payment channels.
“Effective January 1, 2026, individuals will be allowed to withdraw up to N500,000 weekly across all channels, while corporate entities will be limited to N5 million”, it said.
According to the statement, withdrawals above these thresholds would attract excess withdrawal fees of three percent for individuals and five percent for corporates, with the charges shared between the CBN and the financial institutions.
Deposit Money Banks are required to submit monthly reports on cash withdrawals above the specified limits, as well as on cash deposits, to the relevant supervisory departments.
They must also create separate accounts to warehouse processing charges collected on excess withdrawals.
Exemptions and superseding provisions
Revenue-generating accounts of federal, state, and local governments, along with accounts of microfinance banks and primary mortgage banks with commercial and non-interest banks, are exempted from the new withdrawal limits and excess withdrawal fees.
However, exemptions previously granted to embassies, diplomatic missions, and aid-donor agencies have been withdrawn.
The CBN clarified that the circular is without prejudice to the provisions of certain earlier directives but supersedes others, as detailed in its appendices.
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