CONTENTS | ANB-BIA HOMEPAGE | WEEKLY NEWS
by James Pod, Kenya, April 1999
THEME = FINANCE
There is a contagious crisis in the banking industry in Kenya
which could have far wider and deeper economic and social implications
than the uprooting of corruption
By October 1998, 35 commercial banks had gone into liquidation since 1984. Then there was the near-death of the National Bank of Kenya. It is now also public knowledge that the Kenya Commercial Bank is not safe either. All these are an indication of disappearing public deposits representing a loss of confidence in the country's banking system.
Domestic savings in Kenya over the years have amounted to over 70% of growth fixed capital formation. The big question in Kenya today is, whether the government can now create an environment whereby people are encouraged to save. A modern economy requires conscious deliberation, tough discipline and a belief in hard work on the part of the citizens. Are any of these factors to be found in today's Kenya? Also, it has been shown that the moment the government interferes with the private sector, it unleashes a recipe for disaster. And when the government tries to control the country's financial institutions, it is a recipe for a collapse in the financial sector.
The government must maintain:
In the crisis, some or all of the above safeguards have been eroded. The government is seen to have let down the monetary system. One of the functions of the financial system is to receive savings from micro-savers and channel these to investors. In return, the financial sectors screen potential borrowers in terms of their credit worthiness and risks involved in lending to them. This is the financial intermediation process.
If this process is short-circuited by politicians and the government, it fails as an intermediation process. This shakes the pillars of the monetary system, on which the economy hinges as a conduit of economic activity.
In government-owned banks, or where the government has influence or has interfered with this process, the screening role of the financial sector is replaced by political patronage and loans become handouts. There has been a belief that the government will one day bail out these banks. But the destination of these funds have been to individuals (consumption) or parastatals, (like the Kenya Oil Corporation and the National Cereals Board), which are essentially unproductive, or to failed productive activities, causing wealth destruction.
The Central Bank must have known about them too, but looked the other way. It failed in its functions. What happened to the disclosure requirement of non-performing loans? Why does the Central Bank of Kenya disclose the list of loan defaulters only in the midst of crises? One wonders whether it is the Bank's way of throwing in the towel, saying that it cannot handle the situation because of the powerful nature of these loan defaulters.
Directors of these banks knew about these problems and failed to stop them or seek solutions or were dealing with a very powerful clique of people who do not respect the market rules and laws. Under the circumstances, they have no business running banks in the first place. Appointing advisers for them when they have already failed, comes too late and achieves nothing.
When properly done, reducing Kenya's domestic debt will revitalise production and reward the people who work hard in this country. At the moment, the government has betrayed Kenyans by rewarding the lazy!
END
CONTENTS | ANB-BIA HOMEPAGE | WEEKLY NEWS
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