Summary
- It now costs Sh17,750 to maintain Kenya’s most expensive bank account annually, a survey has revealed, pointing to the steep cost of financial services in the country.
- The report, which is the product of a two-year survey of the banking market by Financial Sector Deepening (FSD) Kenya, indicates that Standard Chartered Bank’s “all in one account” is the most expensive to maintain.
- It charges customers Sh17,750 annually -- marking a 31 percent jump in the cost that customers paid previously.
It now costs Sh17,750 to maintain Kenya’s most expensive bank
account annually, a survey has revealed, pointing to the steep cost of
financial services in the country.
The report, which is
the product of a two-year survey of the banking market by Financial
Sector Deepening (FSD) Kenya, indicates that Standard Chartered Bank’s
“all in one account” is the most expensive to maintain.
It charges customers Sh17,750 annually -- marking a 31 percent jump in the cost that customers paid previously.
The
cost of running a bank account encompasses withdrawals, deposits,
transfers and paying for account maintenance charges like ledger fees
and balance enquiries.
The survey lists Barclays
“ultimate account” as the second most expensive to maintain at Sh14,558,
followed by NIC Bank’s “move pay as you go” (Sh13,393) and Stanbic’s
“smart” (Sh12,312) and “silver pay as you go” accounts (Sh11,676).
Diamond Trust Bank’s current account was the cheapest, costing
clients only Sh845 a year. It is the only lender that charged less than
Sh1,000 annually to operate an account, according to the report.
“Accounts
that charge a monthly ledger fee have higher annual costs. However, the
line between pay-as-you-go accounts and flat fee accounts is blurred as
some pay-as-you-go accounts charge a monthly ledger fee. Likewise, some
flat fee accounts also charge per-transaction fees such as withdrawal
and transfer fees,” says FSD in its annual report for 2018.
The
survey sampled the charges levied on a total of 22 different current
and salary accounts in each bank. The 2018 cost of banking study focused
on deposit accounts offered by 11 banks that cumulatively controlled 97
percent of the total number of deposit accounts in Kenya as at December
2017.
The FSD team posed as small-business owners with
a gross monthly income of Sh30,000 and a salaried employee with a net
monthly salary of Sh20,000 and operated in 11 Kenyan banks. The
customers then opened the 22 recommended accounts and maintained them
for a period of four months from June 2018 to October 2018. During this
period, they ran several transactions on the accounts and the costs were
presented in the account statements.
The survey
revealed that the cost of running an account was diverse across banks,
averaging Sh4,419, and ranging from Sh845 to Sh17,750 annually.
“The largest component of annual operating costs are withdrawal
and transfer costs with the latter having huge variations between the
observed minimum and maximum costs,” FSD said.
And in
what may explain the growing preference for digital banking products,
the survey found that a bank customer who transacts digitally saves an
average of Sh9,350 in annual transaction costs.
“A
customer who prefers to transact at the branch will incur an average of
Sh14,970 in annual transaction costs compared to Sh5,620 if transacting
digitally. However, a lot of costs are stacked on digital transactions
such as the cost of an SMS receipt which was as high as Sh28 for one
bank,” FSD said.
The survey shows that the costs of
some digital transactions remain higher than at the branch. Transactions
such as account balance enquiries are free at the branch, but are
charged by some banks when the inquiry is over a mobile banking app.
Additionally, there are several other charges associated with digital
transactions that stack up the costs, such as charging for SMS receipts
and access fee for internet banking.
The study shows
that the decision by the government to double excise duty on fees
charged by banks from 10 to 20 percent in 2018 had caused distortions in
the Over-The-Counter (OTC) withdrawal charges by lenders. Across most
transactions, the increase in costs was commensurate with the increase
in tax except for OTC withdrawals where the average costs went up by
upwards of 50 percent. Banks used this to drive up the cost of
withdrawing cash over the counter by up to 50 percent.
“The
most significant difference is in the cost of withdrawals at the branch
that increased significantly more than the tax,” the study states.
When
opening an account, customers were either forced to deposit a minimum
opening balance or were told to pay for an ATM card or a ledger fee that
was deducted at the end of the first month.
Across all
the banks, transfers done over PesaLink were the cheapest with a
customer spending an average of Sh57 per transaction, while Real-Time
Gross Settlement (RTGS) transfers were the most expensive, averaging
Sh593 per transaction.
The RTGS system is owned and
operated by the Central Bank, which charges participating banks an
annual subscription fee based on the volumes of a bank’s RTGS
transactions.
A certified bank statement averaged Sh462
with a maximum of Sh1,272 per statement. Some banks levy the fee per
page while others charge a standard amount irrespective of the number of
pages.
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