By GEORGE WACHIRA
In Summary
Interest rate capping followed the market
liberalisation that happened in the early 1990s was probably hurriedly
done without sufficient in-built provisions to ensure effective market
competition and consumer protection.
A free market economy pre-supposes that sector systems have
effective checks and balances, and that markets are efficient and with
adequate capacity.
After liberalisation, this was apparently not the
case with the downstream petroleum marketing and banking sectors. Oil
price regulation had to be re-introduced in 2010 while previously
liberalised interest rates were re-capped last week. For the two sectors
the free market intentions may have failed for very similar reasons
which I will analyse below.
Post liberalisation, the sector regulatory agencies
which were meant to ensure smooth transition to a market economy were
late in coming. And when they came they took too long to be effective.
In most cases, the new regulators found entrenched sector vested
interests with self serving practices — often collusive — which have
mostly remained so. These interests have continued to frustrate
effective transition to a free market economy.
To this date the Competition Authority is still
finding its way through the market maze, while no competent structures
for consumer protection have so far been put in place.
In addition, many sectors have not been
bench-marked for cost efficiency and as such businesses tend to easily
pass on “inefficiency costs’ to consumers without anyone raising a
finger. In the oil sector it was the supply logistics inefficiencies,
while in banking it was the out-of-control bad debts.
There is no doubt that the new team at the Central
Bank of Kenya (CBK) has over the past one year or so put maximum efforts
to streamline the money systems in Kenya including banking.
Governor Patrick Njoroge has often pleaded with the banks to demonstrate a balanced judgment on the subject of interest rates.
Also, the highest authorities in the country have
similarly pleaded with the bankers for due prudence on interest rates.
Meanwhile, the bank CEOs have gleefully paraded the media and
shareholders to announce profits which in amounts are obviously beyond
comparison with other economic sectors.
There has been obvious competition among the banks
to declare the highest profits. They failed to acknowledge the negative
impacts by these earnings on the economy, as they ignored the hostile
public mood. Finally, President Uhuru Kenyatta did not have an option
but to sign off the interest rate caps in defence of the economy and the
consumer.
Has there been perfect competition in the banking
sector? My assessment is that it has been competition without effective
checks and balances that should address the shared general interests
with the consumers, businesses, and the economy.
The oil prices were liberalised in 1994 but it was
not until 2006 when a sector regulatory framework was put in place. The
oil supply systems remained inefficient and the cost of supply remained
high. With prices deregulated, there was often one or two “market bulls”
who routinely urged the pump prices upwards and the others would
willingly follow suit. Not always was there justification for such
increases.
There was no apparent urgency to improve oil sector
efficiency because costs could be easily recovered from the consumer.
When supply costs went up, prices were urgently adjusted upwards, but
when costs dropped, prices remained high longer, and reductions were
minimal. As was the case with the banks, public and government pleas to
oil companies for responsible pricing went unheeded and in 2010 the
government decreed maximum oil prices.
When maximum pump prices or interest rates are
uniform across the sectors, the gross margins are virtually fixed and
uniform. Competition then reverts to cost management and efficiency
while increasing turnover. The most cost efficient and consumer
effective oil marketer or banker with the highest turnover delivers the
highest net profits.
When the pump prices were capped, many oil
companies rationalised operations to weed out unprofitable regional and
local business segments. Manpower numbers were reviewed as businesses
were re-structured. A number of multinationals sold off and left the
market, while local firms with lower unit costs increased their market
shares and profits. Customer service became more important for
increasing turnover which is the winning game in a regulated fixed gross
margin market.
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