Some retailers using Point of Sales terminals to receive
payments have abandoned the device and reverted to cash payments,
investigation has shown.
Some of them who spoke with our
correspondent said the decision to dump the PoS devices meant to
facilitate cashless transactions was because customers declined using
the terminals to avoid paying N50 stamp duty charge.
The Central
Bank of Nigeria, in a circular to banks, processors and switches on
September 17 had authorised banks to unbundle merchant settlement
amounts and charge applicable taxes and duties on individual taxes and
duties on individual transactions.
The CBN directed all PoS and
web processing officers to ensure that stamp duty was correctly
processed daily by downloading transactions valued at N1, 000 and above,
multiply the count of the transactions by N50 and pass the
corresponding debit to the respective merchant accounts.
A
retailer dealing in Fast Moving Consumer Goods in the Ogba area of
Lagos, Mr Kola Alade, said the N50 stamp duty charge was an unnecessary
burden on customers who did not see the value in the deduction.
He called on the government to have a rethink as the directive was discouraging cashless payments.
“Sometimes,
I have to ask some of my sales representatives to accompany my
customers to Automatic Teller Machines to collect cash because they have
refused to use the PoS,” Alade said.
Another grocery store
manager in Ikeja, Mr Philip Bassey, said payments with the PoS terminals
had drastically reduced and his terminals had become redundant.
This development may have informed the reduction in the number of active terminals that had been registered for transactions.
Statistics
obtained from the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement Scheme showed that the
number of inactive PoS terminals in the country tripled in the last 10
months to reach 131, 201 in October.
In January this year, NIBSS data showed that the number of inactive terminals was 43,320.
Out
of a total of 404,283 terminals that had been registered by Nigerian
banks as of October, only 273,082 had been deployed for cashless
transactions.
The data showed that a total of 150,153 new PoS
terminals were registered by banks for cashless transactions across the
country in the first 10 months of the year.
In January, 7,975 new
terminals were registered by Nigerian banks, in February, 5,854
terminals were registered and 2,161 PoS terminals were registered in
March.
In the month of April, the number of new terminals
obtained by merchants recorded a boost as 17,102 PoS terminals were
registered by banks.
In May this year, 9,967 new terminals were registered by banks while in June, the registered terminals reduced to 1,297.
A total of 11,234 new terminals were registered in July; and 7,844 PoS devices in August this year.
September saw new PoS registration peak with 69,248 new terminals while 20,065 new PoS terminals were registered in October.
The
President, Association of Mobile Money and Bank Agents in Nigeria, Mr
Victor Olojo, confirmed the dwindling PoS transactions, saying it was
unprofitable for merchants to continue using the devices without
charging customers.
He said, “We have filling stations and big
merchants who have actually dumped the PoS because customers have
declined using it and in other cases, it is not profitable any more when
they don’t charge customers; they have to bear the cost of the N50
stamp duty.
“To a large extent, the PoS is still a very important
tool for agent banking and in most cases, the agents try to push the
N50 stamp duty charge to the end users.”
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