Up to 200 employees of Stanbic Bank are facing layoffs under an
early retirement scheme intended to cut payroll costs for the lender.
The
employees were given terms of the voluntary retirement plan about two
weeks ago, with the lender citing digitisation as the major reason for
the job cuts.
All permanent and pensionable employees
of the bank are eligible for the plan, as per terms of the redundancy
scheme seen by the Business Daily.
The early
retirement plan presented to the staff shows that those taking up the
severance option will get an "ex-gratia payment calculated at the rate
of 1.5 month’s salary for each completed year of service in recognition
of the service rendered to the bank by the employee."
This is in addition to the pay in lieu of notice and compensation for unused leave days.
The lender has also offered employees signing up for the layoff
plan a 25 per cent rebate or discount on the balance of any outstanding
staff loans settled immediately upon exit.
The exiting
employees will continue repaying their loans on staff interest rates for
a period of six months, after which the outstanding amounts will revert
to commercial terms.
They will also be allowed to
remain on the bank’s medical scheme until the end of the year, with an
option of opting out and getting paid the equivalent of the cost of the
insurance to the bank.
Further details
Stanbic had not responded to Business Daily queries on further details of the early retirement plan including the cost to the bank by the time of going to press.
Companies
ordinarily offer employees the early retirement option with an eye on
long-term cost savings, which is reflected in subsequent years’
financials.
Stanbic Bank’s employee costs rose by three
percent in 2018 to Sh5.595 billion. In the first quarter of the year
however, the lender cut its staff costs by 5.3 percent to Sh1.417
billion compared to a similar period last year.
Total operating costs rose by 25 percent in the first quarter to Sh3.55 billion, from Sh2.85 billion in quarter one of 2018.
The
bank has been reporting strong profit growth in the past two reporting
cycles, on the back of higher interest income and non-interest earnings.
In
the first quarter of this year, the bank reported a 19.3 percent jump
in net profit to Sh2.2 billion, building on a robust performance in the
full-year ending December 2018 when net earnings had jumped by 45.5 per
cent to Sh6.27 billion.
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