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Financial System Stability: NDIC Reiterates Commitment To Monitoring The Banking Sector

Managing Director, NDIC, Bello Hassan

The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), will continue to evaluate the banking system to ease the challenges currently confronting the sector.

Managing Director of NDIC, Bello Hassan, said this recently at a retreat for members of the Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions with the NDIC, in Lagos.

According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Hassan was represented by the Executive Director (Operations) NDIC, Mustapha Ibrahim, at the retreat with the theme: “Deposit Insurance in Nigeria; Re-Strategising for Tomorrow.”

The NDIC boss said effective risk based management remained central to safe and sound banking system.

In his words; “The NDIC and the Central Bank of Nigeria have a very robust supervisory framework under the risk based supervisory format the risk based approach is actually proactive. For the most part, we try to anticipate all these risks – Macro, micro, domestically and globally – to address them continuously.

“So, it is so dynamic that we also are constantly on a real time basis, monitoring the industry continuously and fine-tuning our supervisory tools, both onsite and offsite, to mitigate some of the challenges the banks may be facing.

We have tried to immunise the system to withstand shocks that may be impacting on the economy and the financial system,” Hassan said.

He expressed joy that the Nigerian banking industry was currently quite resilient to most of the challenges, particularly, external shocks which the Corporation cannot control.

For his part, the Chairman, Senate Committee on Baking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions, Senator Uba Sani, said the retreat demonstrated the progress made in forging sustainable and workable relationship in the overall interest of the nation.

His words: “The National Assembly and NDIC are key institutions critical to the growth and development of the Nigerian economy. While we provide the legal and institutional frameworks, NDIC carries out its regulatory or supervisory responsibilities in order to safeguard the banking sector.

“Engagement of this nature gives us the platform to deeply look into our activities and responsibilities and also examine how far we have gone in carrying out our mandate as required. It helps in injecting fresh ideas into our operations which will materialise into an improved, effective and efficient service delivery to Nigerians,” he said.

Sani, who was represented by Senator Olubunmi Adetunbi, said the outcome would help in strengthening the financial and banking sectors, and specifically the supervisory and regulatory role of NDIC.

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