The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has unveiled plans to reallocate N5.5 trillion from its development finance activities.
This realignment, as outlined in a recent report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Nigeria, stated the CBN’s plan to refine its economic strategies and focus on its core central banking functions.
The restructuring initiative involves transitioning away from direct development finance, a role traditionally centered on providing favorable lending terms to vital sectors like agriculture and small to medium enterprises.
Instead, the CBN will collaborate with private banks and Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) to facilitate credit flows and stimulate economic growth.
This comes on the heels of the CBN’s suspension of new loan applications under its intervention programs in December 2023.
Commercial banks, previously tasked with distributing intervention loans, are now responsible for recovering outstanding loans issued under these programs, while DFIs, jointly managed by the Ministry of Finance and the CBN, will assume a more prominent role in development finance operations.
The IMF has welcomed this transition, emphasizing the importance of an orderly transfer of the portfolio to avoid disruptions in credit flows.
The Fund also advises reserving preferential lending terms for scenarios where market shortcomings exist, while limiting concessionality to address areas of market failure effectively.
In addition to reallocating funds, the CBN is intensifying efforts to recover overdue loans from its development finance interventions as part of a broader strategy to rein in inflation and manage credit growth.
Measures to achieve this include a focus on standard monetary policy instruments, rolling back quasi-fiscal operations, and reducing rapid credit and money supply growth.