A woman uses her mobile phone. 800,000 Kenyans are reported taking several loans to repay others. FILE PHOTO | NMG
The proliferation of digital loan platforms has not improved lives, a new survey shows.
Instead,
the survey shows, many Kenyans have become prisoners of these systems,
in some instances borrowing to gamble or settle previous debts.
The study says about 6.5 million Kenyans are digital borrowers with 31 per cent taking the cash to try their luck in betting.
Sixteen
per cent of Kenyans have never taken loans through mobile phones while
20,000 Kenyans (three per cent) reported borrowing to place bets, says
the report.
The joint survey conducted by the non-state financial inclusion
agency – FSD-Kenya, Central Bank of Kenya, Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics and Consultative Group to Assist the Poor says that available
digital loan products have not improved livelihoods.
“Digital
credit is not reaching everyone and remains ill-suited for most of the
population, such as farmers and casual workers, whose livelihoods are
characterised by irregular cash flows,” says the phone survey.
While
borrowing to meet basic needs as well as replenish stocks in small
businesses were the main reasons for digital borrowing, 800,000 Kenyans
reported taking several loans to repay others.
“The
rise of the digital credit market has raised concerns about the risk of
excessive borrowing and over-indebtedness among lower-income households.
Digital loans are easy to obtain, short-term, carry a
high interest rate and are available from numerous bank and non-banking
institutions,” states the report.
About three million
borrowers reported late loan repayments that attracted hefty penalties
with nine per cent of defaulters being reported to the credit reference
bureau as risk-averse loanees.
“Half of borrowers spent
their savings to repay loans, 20 per cent of loanees reported reducing
food purchases and 16 per cent reported borrowing (mostly through family
and friends). Poor business performance and loss of jobs in 2017 were
the main cause of default,” it says.
The study calls
for the establishment of an oversight authority to scrutinise the
lucrative interest rates and penalties used by the digital loan
providers some of which don’t fall under any regulatory regime.
The
rates used are not bound by the Central Bank interest regime currently
at a maximum of 13.5 per cent, giving a leeway for digital loan
providers to charge higher. Some providers charge between 7.5 to 10 per
cent interest for a one-month loan.
Dubbed, “The
Digital Credit Revolution in Kenya: An Assessment of Market Demand, 5
Years On”, the survey finds that about one million borrowers did not
understand the interest regime applied where some had disbursed loans,
still held in the mobile account, withdrawn abruptly.
The
study proposes development of tools to track over-indebtedness whose
adverse effects were hurting the well-being of families with nine per
cent of the borrowers (breadwinners) being blacklisted.
It
calls for further studies on product innovation that will promote
proper use of loans, thereby, ensuring digital borrowers are not stuck
with low-value, short-term, expensive credit despite building positive
credit histories.
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