A HISTORY OF MODERN CURRENCY IN THE FORMER SOKOTO PROVINCE, 1903-2015
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DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY, UDUS
Abstract
ABSTRACT
This study examines the history of modern currency in the former Sokoto Province. It is an
aspect of monetary history, which is one of the themes of history that suffers serious
neglect from scholars. Contrary to the assumption of Eurocentric scholars that prior to
Africans’ contact with the Europeans, trade relations were conducted essentially by barter,
the study discovered that the people in the study area have made extensive use of cowries
and other forms of pre-colonial currecies such as slaves and cloths, as medium of exchange
and means of payments both at local and regional levels. However with the arrival of the
Europeans and subsequent imposition of the British administration on the people of the
region, British coins were introduced and gradually they became the only medium of
exchange. As from 1916 the West African Currency Board (WACB) that was established
in 1912 started the issue of currency notes for the entire British West African territories;
and since then the various denominations of the notes were used in different parts of
Nigeria (including the study area) as medium of exchange until in 1959 when as part of
preparation for Nigeria’s independence, the notes were replaced with the ones issued by
the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). It has also been discovered that from 1960 to date,
socio-economic and political developments such as attainment of republican status, civil
war, oil boom, economic recession of the early 1980s and increasing oil revenues of the
early 1990s and 2000s were the reasons advanced by successive governments in Nigeria
for causing change of the currency notes and coins in the study area in particular and in the
country in general. Government policies have equally impacted both positively and
negatively on the values of Nigeria’s currency and monetary system as a whole. The most
recent development in the country’s monetary profile is cashless policy, which is regarded
in this study as a revived effort by the western and capitalist imperialists to integrate the
Nigeria’s financial sector into their larger economic system. However, if effectively
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implemented in country, it would certainly be a watershed in the history of use of cash.
This study concludes that the failure to effectively commence the policy nationwide by 1st
July, 2015, was not unconnected with inadequate infrastructural facilities for its
implementation and lack of awareness about the policy among substantial number of
Nigeria’s population.
