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Which part of your money won’t be touched by the CBN’s cybersecurity levy?

Banking institutions and not their customers directly have the burden of the collection and subsequent remittance to the National Cybersecurity Fund (NCF) account domiciled with the central bank within the first five working days of a new month.

Since the Central Bank of Nigeria announced the cybersecurity levy it says would come into effect in two weeks, the reactions from bank customers have been largely negative because they fear the invention of new taxes that will overburden them.

In the cybersecurity levy that was communicated via a Monday 6 May circular issued by the banking regulator, customers see a new billing system that was designed to drain what limited resources they have left.

The CBN in the recent memo had instructed commercial, merchant, non-interest, payment service banks and similar formations in finance to implement 0.5 per cent deduction in respect to electronic transactions.

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Doing this is keeping with the Cybercrime Act 2024. Section 44 of the act according to the circular imposed a levy of 0.5% (0.005) equivalent to half a percent of all electronic transactions value by the business specified in the second schedule of the Act.

Banking institutions and not their customers directly have the burden of the collection and subsequent remittance to the National Cybersecurity Fund (NCF) account domiciled with the central bank within the first five working days of a new month, while the Office of the National Security Adviser will oversee the control of the collections gathered.

But not every electronic transaction will be thrown into the NCF blanket due to the exemptions laid out. An exclusive list of 16 payment categories will not be touched by the Cybersecurity Act, 2024, and that covers the most basic of deals captured after this line.

  1. Loan disbursements and repayments.
  2. Salary payments.
  3. Intra-account transfers within the same bank or between different banks for the same customer.
  4. Intra-bank transfers between customers of the same bank.
  5. Other Financial Institutions instructions to their correspondent banks.
  6. Interbank placements.
  7. Banks’ transfers to CBN and vice-versa.
  8. Inter-branch transfers within a bank.
  9. Cheque clearing and settlements.
  10. Letters of Credits.
  11. Banks’ recapitalisation-related funding – only bulk funds movement from collection accounts.
  12. Savings and deposits, including transactions involving long-term investments such as Treasury Bills, Bonds, and Commercial Papers.
  13. Government Social Welfare Programmes transactions e.g. Pension payments.
  14. Non-profit and charitable transactions, including donations to registered non-profit organisations or charities.
  15. Educational institutions’ transactions, including tuition payments and other transactions involving schools, universities, or other educational institutions.
  16. Transactions involving bank’s internal accounts such as suspense accounts, clearing accounts, profit and loss accounts, inter-branch accounts, reserve accounts, nostro and vostro accounts, and escrow accounts.

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