‘There is no evidence that bank failure is the thing of the past in Nigeria because it
is still on the economic scene. Bank distress has become a common lexicon in
Nigeria, given many bank failures till date’. Ebhodaghe (2001) stated that when a
firm which is either a bank or not is liquidated for its inability to meet its
obligation to creditors, it can be described as having failed. Thus we could use
bank failure to describe a situation where, as a result of irremediable bank distress,
a bank’s license is revoked and the bank subsequently liquidated. Liquidation is
thus, an aftermath of bank failure. In fact, if revocation of license is seen as the
death of a bank, liquidation is its burial.
Bank distress is the fore runner of bank failure. Whereas a bank in distress could
have chances of regaining health, a failed bank loses every chance of life. Its final
destination is the mortuary of Nigerian deposit insurance corporation (NDIC) from
where it will proceed to its final resting place – liquidation – courtesy of the
undertakers. Bank failure also is when the bank system fails, which means when
the entire bank ATMs and the bank POS machine fail to work. The banks have to
shut for a while, because the machines that are inside the bank are broken.
Corruption in the banking sector; so-called rich men making deals with bank
managing directors (MDs), and taking loans without paying back. See what is
happening to some commercial banks and micro-finance banks in Nigeria. Banks
that lent money to people with little or no credit and those people cannot afford
what was purchased, and then they file bankrupt....