The
Bank of Mozambique on Monday fixed an annual limit of 700,000 meticais (13,160
US dollars, at current exchange rates) for payments abroad using a credit or
debit card issued by a Mozambican bank.On 30 November, the governor of the
central bank, Ernesto Gove, had warned that large sums of money were leaving
the country due to the unrestrained use of bank cards abroad, and that this
type of spending has risen dramatically. Three years ago the use of bank cards
abroad drained the country of around 300 million US dollars a year, but today
the figure is 800 million dollars a year. The owner of one card (whom Gove did
not name) used it for purchases abroad in one year in excess of two million
dollars.Gove said the point of using credit and debit cards abroad was to pay
for such things as holiday, health and education expenses, but not to make
commercial imports, for which there exist normal mechanisms controlled by the
central bank. The Bank of Mozambique feared that uncontrolled credit and debit
card spending abroad was one of the factors contributing to the recent sharp
depreciation of the metical.The 700,000 meticais annual limit will come into
force on 1 January. Bank clients will not be able to evade the limit by
multiplying the number of cards they hold in one or more banks. The limit is
per person, not per card.Exceptions can be made, but the client must make a
case to his bank as to why he should be allowed to exceed the limit, and all
such exceptions must be authorized by the Bank of Mozambique.All banks must
obtain an undertaking from each of their card holders that they will not exceed
the limit. The banks may establish lower limits for clients on a case by case
basis – as is already the case with credit cards. In setting those limits, the
banks should take into account the risk profile of each of their clients and
legislation on money laundering and the financing of terrorism.The Bank of
Mozambique also denied a report appearing in some of the media that it has
ordered the automatic conversion of foreign currency accounts into meticais.
There was no such instruction, the Bank said, and all exchange measures taken
were based on the exchange legislation (which does not prohibit the holding of
accounts in foreign currency).There are, however, restrictions on foreign
currency accounts, and on 30 November Gove promised that these would be
enforced. Under the law exporters who are paid in foreign currency can only
keep 50 per cent of it in foreign currency accounts. The central bank’s
statement assured the public that “the markets are continuing to operate
normally, and the authorities are making every effort to ensure macro-economic
stability”.
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