2018 been a rough year for the banking sector and other businesses.
The
year started with the Bank of Tanzania closing several banks due to
undercapitalisation and violation of the Banking and Financial
Institutions Act of 2006 and its regulations and ended with temporary
revocation of bureau de change services for the interbank foreign
exchange market.
Five Tanzanian community banks
Covenant Bank For Women Ltd, Efatha Bank Ltd, Njombe Community Bank Ltd,
Kagera Farmers’ Co-operative Bank Ltd and Meru Community Bank Ltd were
in January closed over undercapitalisation.
Kilimanjaro
Co-operative Bank Ltd, the state-run Tanzania Women’s Bank Plc and
Tandahimba Community Bank Ltd which has partnered with CRDB, were given
until June 30 to raise the Tsh2 billion minimum core capital or have
their licences revoked.
Bank of Tanzania’s outgoing
Governor Prof Benno Ndulu advised banks to partner so as to minimise
operational costs and board size, simplify their overall systems and
create capital for sustainability and growth.
Some
banks reduced their workforce; Access Bank from 776 in June 2017 to 634
employees in June 2018, while Ecobank reduced their branches from eight
last year to seven and retained 128 employees down from 185 employees in
2017.
President John Magufuli has asked several times that the Bank of Tanzania act against non-performing financial institutions.
“We have 58 banks but we would rather have a few viable ones than many that are failing,” said President Magufuli.
At
the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange, total market capitalisation for all
28 listed equities decreased by 7.7 per cent, to Tsh1.696 trillion
($738.2 million).
Also, by the end of October, the
government had bought the entire cashew nut harvest of around 220,000
tonnes for $1.43 (Tsh3,300) per kilogramme directly from farmers,
locking out private companies.
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