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Monday, February 18, 2013

Poor planning haunts welfare group members in old age


Rura Welfare Association secretary Francis Mwangi. Photo/BERNADINE MUTANU
Rura Welfare Association secretary Francis Mwangi. Photo/BERNADINE MUTANU  NATION MEDIA GROUP
By BERNARDINE MUTANU bmutanu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
  • Determined to set up a source of revenue, a group of retirees saves and applies for a loan only for banks to turn down their application — a bitter pill that reminds them of the chance they missed to prepare for their retirement when they were still working. At their age, the road is too bumpy to start an investment venture
When a group of retirees in Nyeri County came together to form an investment club about 20 years ago, their dream was out of this world.

“We wanted to build a ‘Hilton’ but we later realised we could not because we lacked enough capital to do so,” Mr Francis Mwangi told Money.

Mr Mwangi is the secretary of a group of elderly citizens from Karigaini village in Nyeri County who dropped their investment ambition because they not only had inadequate capital, but could not qualify for credit from commercial banks to roll out their project.

The Rura Welfare Association, whose 15 members are all retired civil servants above the age of 65, was started in 1992 with the primary objective of bringing friends together.

Probably buoyed by their numbers, the group transformed itself into an investment outfit three years later.
“We spotted a piece of land in Nanyuki and wanted to buy it to start a company. However, we faced numerous challenges, especially in registering the company and decided to shelve our ambition,” says Mr Mwangi.

For eight years, the members made a monthly contribution of Sh300 each towards their goal. The money was saved in a joint account.

By 2000, they had saved only Sh73,183, which was not enough to buy the land that cost Sh200,000.
Another complication was that the ownership of the plot, on which they planned to construct houses and commercial buildings, was mired in controversy.

“We proposed that the money we had in the account be shared according to contribution since it could not even buy the piece of land we wanted, let alone enable us to put up the buildings,” said Mr Mwangi.
This decision was reached after the group’s efforts to get loans from commercial banks failed.

The group sought professional advice and was told that it was the wrong time to think about investing since the plan was likely to get complicated and that the members were unlikely to live long enough to enjoy the fruits of their work.

“Some members felt that we were entering into a complicated venture. They said it was not good to get into debt at our age,” Mr Mwangi said.
Although the group had good goals, it lacked the drivers to achieve them. This was partly because the members were retirees without a steady source of income apart from their pension, which was too little to start an investment of the size they envisioned. They could also not qualify for financial assistance from banks.

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