Introduction
Ghana
has a well-defined formal financial sector as set out by its central bank that
is the Bank of Ghana (BOG). Since the financial sector reforms, the sector has
recorded impressive development in terms of numbers and nature of financial
institutions. The main actors in the
financial sector of Ghana are the Capital Markets, Banks, Rural and Community
Banks, Non-Bank financial, Insurance Companies, Pension and Provident Funds and
the Microfinance Institutions.
Irrespective
of the vibrant financial sector, Ghana still has a large unbanked and under
population. The objective of this article is to take a look at the various
reasons hindering the ability of the banking sector in contributing to
financial inclusion in Ghana.
Ghana and Financial Inclusion
Financial
inclusion or inclusive financing is the delivery of financial services at
affordable cost to sections of disadvantaged and low-income segments of
society. Financial inclusion aims at providing financial access to non-banked
and under-bank population with affordable and appropriate products. The
important thing about financial inclusion is not only about financial access.
Access to financial services can not only be addressed by having many established
financial institutions within an economy.
Achieving
financial inclusion entails ensuring that the prices of the financial products
designed are affordable (in terms of the direct and indirect cost associated
with acquiring a financial service or product) to the clients especially the
low income clients.
For
the purpose of this article much focus will be on the universal banks and
financial institutions which form part of Ghana’s microfinance sector as
directed by the microfinance policy guidelines.
Considering
the number of unit banks operating in Ghana, it is expected that the financial
sector players will have recorded deeper outreach with its services and
products. Deeper outreach such that, more poor and low income clients would
participate directly in the formal financial sector. However, that is not the
case.
The
cumulative single financial institutions operating in Ghana by the end of 2014 is
tabulated below.
Nature
of organization
|
Number
of regulated institutions
|
Banks
|
26
|
Rural Banks
|
136
|
Savings and Loan
|
26
|
MFIs (Deposits)
|
344
|
MFIs FNGO
|
5
|
Money Lenders (companies and
Individual)
|
116
|
Susu Companies
|
300
|
Individual Susu Collectors
|
1,500
|
Others (Finance houses, leasing,
Mortgage etc.
|
33
|
Credit Unions
|
538(approximate)
|
Total
|
1,541
|
Source:
From many sources.
The
table above shows the number of different types of financial institutions
operating in Ghana. It is important to
indicate that these are without their branches. For example, the rural banks
are noted to have over 700 branches or agencies and they can be found in every
district capital of Ghana. Currently all the major bank’s with few exceptions, have
their presence in all the regional capitals of Ghana. The savings and loans company have less regional
spread. They can, however, be found in very economically active regions with
majority having strong presence in Greater Accra, Ashanti and Brong Ahafo
Regions.
The
underlying objective of looking at the number of units banks and financial
service providers is to assume that the more the numbers of financial sector
players in an economy, the better their coverage or outreach which should
directly result in increase in the total amount of money in circulation through
the banking sector and overall growth of the banking population. The reality is that, in spite of the growth in
number of financial service providers, Ghana still have a low banking
population and the economy still have large amount of money outside the formal banking sector.
In
2009 Ghana had 1.2 million bank account
holders out of a population of 23 million (a ratio of 5%) compared to Nigeria's
23 million banks accounts holders among a population of 140 (more than 16%).
Country comparison ranked according to financial exclusion levels of 12
countries in Africa indicates that Ghana has the fifth lowest level of
financial exclusion of 44% (Finscope, 2010.) The Finscope Ghana 2010 survey further
reveals that almost 3 in 4 (73.1%) Ghanaian adults claim that none of the
income they receive passes through a bank account. It further reported that a
total of 44% of Ghanaian adults do not use any form of financial product or
mechanism (be it formal or informal) to manage their financial activities. According
the findings there are still 29.4% of Ghana’s population that depends on informal
financial services.
Microfinance
institutions have played significant role in extending financial services to
poor and low income clients. This is because it has been noted that, MFIs per
their nature have the systems and methodologies needed to reach financially
excluded clients. In spite of the role
of MFIs in promoting financial inclusion we cannot overlook the role of traditional banks insupporting the call for
financial services to reach majority of the people wherever they can be found
in Ghana’s economy. This is so because
banks are major influencers in the Ghanaian financial sector in terms of assets
and customer base. The universal banks in Ghana dominate the banking industry.
They control 90% of the total banking assets (FINSSP 11, 2012). Their role in
providing financial services even for the poor and low clients cannot be
discounted. For example some universal banks
over the years have developed specific products and services that targets low
income clients. These banks have adopted strategies to enable them to
efficiently provide services to financially excluded clients or micro clients.
Some of the notable strategies used by the universal banks interested in downscaling
are as follows:
· banks
creating internal microfinance departments or units to provide microfinance
services
· establishing
partnership or linkages with other MFIs
(Fidelity Bank and Ghana Association of Microfinance Companies
· developing
different business entities (HFC – Boafo, EB-Accion) to meet their objective of
targeting the unbanked clients.
ADDRESSING THE LARGE INFORMAL
MARKET
The
entire financial sector and key stakeholders should concern themselves to
understand why there is still a huge informal financial market and what is
hindering the sector in helping to increase the total amount of money
circulating through the formal financial sector.
Understanding
the dynamics of development financing and the role of banks as well as the
nature of informal sector clients can help in addressing the major barriers to
outreach. Increasing formal financial access the non-banked population is important
since there is a link between the level of poverty and participation of
financial services. This is to say that financial services can provide the
needed catalyst for poverty reduction.
Some
of the challenges hindering the role of banks and other financial service
players in achieving outreach are as follows:
No target markets-“all play all”
Ghana’s financial regulatory requirements are
clearly stated. Sector players know and understand what will qualify an institution as a universal bank, savings
and loans, rural and community banks, microfinancecompany (deposit or non-deposits)
money lenders, etc. It further defines what these entities are permitted to do
or not to do. For instance, savings and loans companies (S&L) and rural and
community banks (RCBs) by regulations cannot operate foreign currency accounts
but the universal banks are permitted to engage in such operations.
One
major challenge with the entire regulatory policy especially with regards to
institutions under the microfinance policy guidelines is that, the policy does
not define which sector of the markets or type of clients these entities should
target or specific areas where these entities can operate. What, therefore,
happens in practice is that there is no segregation of customers or targets by
the financial institutions. This is evident by the findings captured in the
2014 banking survey which was conducted by Price Water House Coopers (pwc)
that some bank executives admitted that already S&Ls and RCBs are competing
with them in the same retail and commercial deposit markets. This, therefore, suggests
that the banks and other institutions within the entire financial sector are
targeting the same clients. For instance as observed by Finscope, the Ghana 2010 report indicated that 55% of
clients that are banked (34%) also uses other type of financial products or
services. It can be deduced from this finding that clients do engage more than one financial
service provider to meet their financial
needs. For example, some clients of universal banks will turn to other
financial service providers, credit Unions, MFIs, S & L to acquire loans or other services because the smaller financial institutions may have
quicker turnaround time for product delivery or may have less rigorous loan screening methodologies compared with
the universal banks. It is therefore common to find clients who have financial
relationships with a universal bank also having dealings with a microfinance company.
To
further improve outreach and deepen financial access, financial institutions
that have been registered as microfinance companies under the microfinance
policy guidelines must have a defined market. This target market can be defined
by income levels, type or nature and size of their enterprises or targeting using
poverty score card. This can assist to enable microfinance companies to target
the clients that they have been created to serve and not participate in the
same market as the Universal banks.
Lack of product innovation and
research
For
financial institutions to deepen outreach, it is very important to consider the
nature of the financial products that is being served to clients and potential
clients, the delivery processes, appropriateness of the product to solve the
needs of the clients and more importantly the affordability of the product to the
clients in question with further consideration to the sustainability or
profitability of the financial institution delivery the product.
There
is lack of product differentiation in Ghana’s financial sector. The sector has
many banks and other financial service providers; however, there is very
limited differentiation in the products and services available. There is limited
array of products or services from which clients can choose from to meet their
specific needs. We can refer to these products as generic products. Across the
types of financial institutions, loans targeting salaried workers as a product are
very predominant. This is because of the relatively less risk associated with
the development, implementation and management of this kind of product.
The
fact is that many of the banks and financial institutions do not spend enough
time and money to research and develop appropriate products that can comfortably
assist the larger non – banking population to meet their financial
complexities. Financial institutions and banks in Ghana sell more off the
shelve products to their clients. When one bank takes the pain to develop a
product, majority of the others banks either copy or make some few adjustments
and goes ahead to implement the products without a critical understanding of
the underlying dynamics of the target markets.
Although
there are somehow appreciable developments in product delivery through
technology, overall there is still not enough proof to demonstrate how
technology is helping to deepen outreach with greater emphasis on reducing cost
of transaction, convince and access.
Where are the products and services to provide
loans to smallholders, medium and commercial farmers? The quick rebuttal to
this is that agricultural loans are risky. Yes they are, but the good point is
that even with similar or same risk, financial sector players in Kenya, Rwanda
and Uganda still find agriculture a
profitable venture to invest in, so why not the banks in Ghana?
I definitely agree that the state has a part
to play in organizing the agricultural market. However, there is more that can
be done if appropriate products are developed to meet specific financial needs of
farmers and other aggregators along specific agricultural value chain. The
approach of many banks is that they lump agriculture together as one whole
component. However, there are many different aspects of agriculture and
customized products can be designed to meet the needs of the players along specific
value chain.
Banks
must also develop workable loan screening methods to help them make quality
loan decisions. An efficient screening tool will assist them capture the nature
and character of their clients and potential clients. The screening methods of most
banks and other financial institutions weigh towards already banking clients
and they naturally select out clients in the informal sector of the economy due
to perceive risk. Informal sector player clients are aware that banks are not
very comfortable dealing with them. They know that the banks are not ready to
assist them as local entrepreneurs because they think they are vulnerable to
the conditions they set. The banks are just not being innovative in
their credit-delivery role.
To
ensure that the entire banking sector improves outreach and become very
instrumental in the development process of the entire economy, it is important
to understand that banking has moved beyond just circulating financial
resources within the economy from the excess “cash holders” to “deficit clients
within the economy. Banks must commit resources and time to develop very
appropriate products to suit the needs and nature of the clients that are still
outside the main financial sector.
Bank trained and not Development
conscious
Banking
in Ghana operates more as ‘high street banking’. They operate in already known
territories and are not comfortable and unwilling to develop new markets. This
style of banking practiced by the universal banks has influenced all the non –
banking financial institutions such that all their systems and processes are developed
around that of the universal banks.
Another
important thing to consider is how staff within the banking or financial sector
are trained. Majority of the refresher courses organized within the financial
sector are tailored around the traditional roles of banking. Most of the
refresher programmes focuses on risk management, treasuring management, reconciliation,
credit management, internal control, etc. This is not to say these programs or courses
are not relevant. They are; but the capacity building of the staff should
include developmental challenges, entrepreneurship, micro enterprise
development and management, finance and development, product development, etc.
The
fact is that Ghana is a developing country and, therefore, banks in Ghana
cannot fully operate without having to understand the nature and
characteristics that is associated with a developing country.
The staff who have the responsibility of
dealing with clients must appreciate the various developmental challenges and
how to manage these challenges through the provision of financial services.
Banking in a developing economy cannot evolve around debits and credits, salary
loans, consumer loans and still expect to have a wider and deeper financial
sector. Going forward, the various programmes and refresher courses for banking
professionals must be reviewed to meet the current changes in order to have the
needed skills to move Ghana’s financial sector towards achieving financial
inclusion.
Conclusion
Ghana’s
financial sector players can contribute immensely to the economic development
agenda of the country. This can well be achieved if banks and financial institutions
develop appropriate and innovative products with conscious efforts made to target
economically active clients outside the formal financial sector. The challenge
of infrastructure within the country can be solved by appropriate innovation
that can assist the financial institutions to be efficient in their operations
in order to achieve sustainability and the impact of their operations.
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