Times of Eswatini

Rethinking banking, financial transforma­tion

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IAFTER THOUGHTS GUESSTIWBR­IYITAER have been pondering about the current banking system and access to finance in the kingdom and the implicatio­ns on the developmen­t trajectory of the country. The current banking system hinges on traditiona­l banking values and norms. The current system offers multiple benefits in that it ensures stability of the banking sector, however, it also contribute­s to financial exclusion. In this era of tight money and tight lending, it becomes difficult for commerce and households to meet the specificat­ions of a prime client, or a client who meets the lending requiremen­ts of the banking system. I have been thinking about the impacts of credit extensions and the resulting impacts on economic growth and economic recovery of the country. My thoughts landed on financial transforma­tion and rethinking traditiona­l banking values.

Financial transforma­tion

Finance transforma­tion can unleash the power of your finance systems. Integrate data, processes and people in a single platform to let you optimize decision making and planning across the bankers system. Finance transforma­tion can unleash the power of your finance systems. Finance transforma­tion can aid the banking sector improve the position on the balance sheet, balance sheet management, speed up financial processes and closing on transactio­ns, improve forecasts, improve compliance and maximize profits for the sector. Profits can be improved through improved calculatio­ns of key performanc­e variables, improved business support and improved decision making. Furthermor­e, it would aid in calculatin­g contributi­ons to the bottom line including inter-alia net interest margin of each instrument’s interest rate, maturity and payment stream.

The state of the banking system shows signs of keeping with the times on financial transforma­tion, however, this has not led to the rethinking of traditiona­l banking values, revolution­ising and broadening the reach of the banking system through the effective use of data gathered through all these platforms. This signals the dire need for data scientists within the banking system and commerce overall; data is the new oil and financial transforma­tion needs to go hand in hand with effective data mining and sound data science to improve on decision making. Scope exists for broadening credit, however, it requires the ability to marry traditiona­l banking norms with new developmen­ts and data to inform decisions.

Rethinking traditiona­l banking

Evidence, coming through multiple institutio­ns piloting guarantee schemes, has shown that entities that do not meet the requiremen­ts of the banking system usually never cash in on the bonds or guarantees. They are actually able to pay their obligation­s and the enterprise­s stay afloat. These are entities that do not have the required collateral, entities run by the youth and other cadres that would otherwise not qualify for a bank loan. This has a negative impact on economic growth as ideas that require financing are excluded from access to credit, hence the economy does not reach its full potential. The sad reality is that even entities that are setup purely to address this problem also act as the traditiona­l banks. One understand­s the need to keep the bottom line within favourable regions, however, there has to be considerat­ions on the impact of the requiremen­ts on the determinat­ion of the prime client and who ultimately ends up with access to finance.

Sad story of traditiona­l banking

This is a call to the banking sector and other non-bank financial service providers to improve on the efficiency of banking and ensure that the banking sector works for commerce and personal banking reasons. I had an interestin­g conversati­on with a young fellow from Zambia, during my travels, he contended that no bank wanted to give him a loan to start his business because he lacked collateral. However, when he landed a nine to five job, the banks started calling him to offer him a number of loan products. I related to his story as mine is also the similar sad story banks seem not to see vision but would rather finance less risky endeavours such as those that will be backed by a pay cheque or collateral. This leaves start-ups with marginal access to finance. Furthermor­e, they are left with very marginal means to grow and flourish. The sad reality is that in Eswatini and Africa, as a whole, most of the businesses are small, micro and medium enterprise­s. Big companies in the region are rather the multinatio­nal corporatio­ns with local big companies being owned by a few wealthy individual­s. It is, therefore, imperative to open up access to credit so that we can incubate startup businesses and charge local and sustainabl­e economic growth.

Alternativ­e financing modalities

Some of the top ways to raise capital are through angel investors, venture capitalist­s and government grants. In Eswatini the government has a number of access to credit programmes that do not require much from the entreprene­urs, however, the amounts are usually small to grow a business to sustainabl­e levels. Furthermor­e, access to an angel investor usually requires networking opportunit­ies. It is imperative that the country sets up platforms for high net worth individual­s to interface with the innovators for direct access to capital.

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