Two surveys carried out by the World Bank between April and
October this year show that unnamed large global banks are restricting
or terminating their relationships with other financial institutions.
According
to the global lender, the move puts at risk money transfer services,
meaning that countries that depend on diaspora remittances for foreign
exchange inflows will be affected.
The studies also
indicate that business lines such as clearing of cheques and trade
finance will also be affected, threatening cross-border trade.
“Now
that we have evidence that large banks are reducing services to
correspondent banks and remittance providers, the private and public
sectors need to come together to find practical and fact-based
solutions.
There is a real risk that turning away
customers could actually reduce transparency in the system by forcing
transactions through unregulated channels,” said Ms Gloria Grandolini,
senior director of finance and markets global practice at the World Bank
Group.
This comes at a time when the Central Bank of
Kenya has reported a reduction in the amount of money sent home by
Kenyans living abroad.
According to the latest data
from CBK, diaspora remittances in September stood at Sh13.09 billion,
down from Sh13.47 billion recorded in August, due to lower remittances
from North America.
Kenyans in the United States and Canada account for 48.2 per cent of the total remittance inflows.
The
CBK statistics, however, show that remittances for the nine months to
September went up by 7.8 per cent to Sh116.2 billion compared to Sh108
billion recorded for a similar period last year.
FINANCIAL EXCLUSION
According
to the World Bank, these restrictions are largely driven by commercial
decisions as well as legitimate concerns about money laundering and
terrorism financing risks, leaving customers to turn to unregulated
financial institutions.
Early last month, survivors of
the 1998 twin bombings of the US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam
sued a French bank, which they accused of banking for the terrorists.
In
the suit filed in the United States, 68 victims and their families are
demanding up to Sh245 billion in compensation from the BNP Paribas Bank.
Correspondent banking relationships aid companies and individuals to do business and make payments internationally.
Termination
or contraction of these services can result in financial exclusion and
negatively impact countries that depend on foreign remittance inflows to
boost their growth.
“Making banking services
accessible, transparent and affordable is essential to achieving the
goals of promoting financial integrity and universal financial access by
2020, which means that basic legitimate access to the formal financial
system should be possible for everyone,” said Ms Grandolini.
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