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I am a
strong supporter of financial sector regulations and
supervisions in Ethiopia. I believe that the central bank
has done a good job over the past few years of disciplining
an otherwise difficult business. I only wish that the
National Bank of Ethiopia could have a strong law passed and
then continue to be powerful enough to enforce it, as
depositors and minority shareholders are at the mercy of
boards of major shareholders and their appointees.
It is in light of this view that I appreciated reading the
commentary on banking by Dani Rodrik, a professor at
Harvard University, which was published last week headlined:
“Guns, Drugs and Financial Markets”, [Volume 8 Number 415,
April 13, 2008]. His analysis of “finance skeptics” is
relevant to Ethiopia, I would argue, for sufficient reasons.
The private banking phenomenon is a relatively new
development in Ethiopia; this is why managements, boards,
auditors, shareholders and depositors have limited knowledge
and experience of modern banking. I suspect that depositors
and even shareholders have not much capacity to monitor
banking activities.
Senior
management of banks is appointed by boards of directors. The
boards, however, are deliberately hand-picked by a few major
shareholders with controlling stakes, so both the senior
bank management and the directors are consequently
controlled by a few shareholders who hold the larger piece
of the banking pie and therefore treat the banks as their
own finance estate despite the fact that about 90pc of the
banks’ assets belong to the public.
Directors of boards were known to issue over 100pc of
deposits as loans and advances some years back in spite of
the clearly specified liquidity and reserve requirement of a
minimum of 20pc of deposits set by the National Bank of
Ethiopia (NBE). That was also a period when paid-up capital
was uniformly low.
The practice of taking loans and advances for share trading
or spending them on ventures totally unrelated to the loan
agreement has been wide-spread in all private banks. This
is an indication of the audacity of boards and managements,
as well as of the poor quality of external auditing in
enforcing banking regulations in Ethiopia today.
Unlike
Europe, United States, Asia, Australia and some countries in
Africa, Ethiopia does not have deposit insurance. Depositors
are at the mercy of major shareholders and their appointees,
the boards of directors. Nevertheless, there are those who
argue that deposit insurance has problems which cause bank
managers to take more risks than necessary and make
shareholders reluctant to closely monitor these banks
thinking that their investments are duly protected. I
believe that this argument does not hold water in the
Ethiopian case.
Ethiopian
banks have legally-limited activities. Neither the
depositors nor the controlling shareholders know exactly
what is going on in these banks; only about one per cent of
the group may have limited knowledge of what is going on
because shareholders hardly have access to information,
while the others may not necessarily be interested in
enhancing the sound development and profitability of private
banks as their primary goal is to use banks to advance their
other businesses. There is no way that effective supervision
can be made by shareholders in Ethiopia.
All stakeholders and the national economy can benefit from
a deposit insurance scheme which could protect banks,
depositors, employees and shareholders from wayward major
shareholders and boards of directors, therefore reducing the
risks that banks face.
This is
most important considering that Ethiopia’s financial
industry has no rating firms. Even external auditors are
practically useless since they rarely measure up to the
powers and duties entrusted to them by the Commercial Code.
As it is, there is no financial institution that uses risk
models; bank monitoring through such practices is virtually
non-existent in Ethiopia.
That
leaves the responsibility for serious regulation and
supervision of the banking world on the shoulders of the
National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE). I commend its officials for
having this year come up with a loan management directive in
a bid to avert such crises. I strongly believe that this
directive, coupled with another set of directive issued in
2006, has taken great strides towards ensuring selection
criteria for individuals chosen for the board of directors.
Unfortunately, this directive falls short of providing clear
guidance on mechanisms for implementation. As a result,
incompetent and weak directors have continued to be
recruited by a few major shareholders who have consistently
failed to learn lessons from their past failures.
What I see in the latest directive is a determination by
the regulators at the NBE to protect depositors,
shareholders and the economy from incompetent bank
management. If anything, it will force these banks to manage
loans and advances with more transparency and
accountability. For instance, the directive requires
quarterly reports on loan classification and provisioning to
be filed to the NBE, thus encouraging more investment in the
financial sector from Ethiopian nationals, both locally and
abroad.
The reference to sampling in Article 5.5 can be made more
clear by requiring the use of “scientific sampling” to
ensure the accuracy and usefulness of the estimates in a
sample-based report for Examiner Review (Article 10
of the directives), although it could be argued that such
details is not NBE’s business. I strongly believe, however,
that boards of directors have proven to have little capacity
to manage such issues effectively on their own.
As a supporter of regulation and supervision, the current
draft banking law will, hopefully, be strong enough to
foster the growth of a healthier and more competitive
financial sector and prepare Ethiopian banks for survival
and continued development within the global village, even
when Ethiopia becomes a member of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) in a few years.
It will facilitate a still stronger central bank to
continue to implement more effective regulation and
supervision. The bill also provides controlling power to a
larger group of unrelated shareholders after gradually
lowering the maximum percentage of shares that can be owned
by individual or related parties from 20pc to about five per
cent now. It is worth noting that 20 or more major
shareholders are unlikely to agree on a control cartel.
The bill will therefore furnish an environment in the
financial sector that enables the appointment of
independent, competent and professional boards of directors
that are elected by all shareholders based on
well-considered, search-based nominations conducted by
professional search committees appointed at previous annual
meetings by shareholders. I also believe that this approach
will not deny the rights of major shareholders who can
always use their strong voting power to influence the final
elections of board of directors.
Undoubtedly, the bill is a good instrument to bring about
reasonable uniformity in the financial sector on
compensations, fees and benefits paid to board of directors,
a regulating body which should be free from the influence of
major shareholders; while it will also guarantee adequate
protection to depositors. In the end, all these safety
valves and protective measures will minimize the likelihood
of bank runs.
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