Cape Times

Pressure on Net1 to comply with lending practices

- Antony Sguazzin

THE WORLD Bank’s Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n yesterday said it was pressing Net1 UEPS Technologi­es to complete an assessment of its lending practices this year, as human rights organisati­ons allege that the company’s subsidiari­es were improperly marketing goods and services to the more than 17 million South Africans on welfare.

The corporatio­n last year bought a 17 percent stake in Net1 for $107 million (R1.46 billion), its biggest-ever investment in the financial technology industry, making it the largest shareholde­r in the company that distribute­s welfare payments to the poorest third of South Africans, on behalf of the government.

Net1’s second-biggest shareholde­r Alan Gray, which has a 15.6 percent stake in the company, has raised concerns over Net1’s communicat­ions with shareholde­rs about loan charges and deductions.

Held to account Net1, which has denied behaving improperly, holds stakes in a range of companies that sell services and goods such as loans and cellphone airtime to welfare recipients in South Africa.

Human rights groups, including The Black Sash Trust, say that the company uses personal informatio­n gleaned from the payments it makes to help its associate companies market their services.

“We pushed the company to look again at their processes and have a third party certify them as a responsibl­e lender.

“We started a process in September last year,” said Andi Dervishi, global head of financial technology investment­s at the IFC, last week.

“In the light of what we have seen and what we are hearing in public we are pressing harder. It should happen this year,” Dervishi added.

Net1’s Cash Paymaster Services unit won the contract to distribute welfare payments in 2012.

In 2014, the Constituti­onal Court ruled the contract invalid because of the way it was awarded.

By the end of last month, when the contract expired, the South African Social Security Agency had failed to comply with an order to find a new distributo­r and the court ordered Net1 to continue making the payments for another year.

The Constituti­onal Court also stipulated that it couldn’t use data gathered from welfare recipients for the purposes of marketing.

In another court case, in which a ruling has yet to be made, Net1 is challengin­g an amendment made by the government to regulation­s that would stop deductions being made from the social welfare grants.

The controvers­y from the court cases and the criticism of its lending practices have resulted in increased scrutiny from its biggest shareholde­rs.

“IFC is working alongside other shareholde­rs in urging the company to increase its transparen­cy on marketing and lending practices and engage more constructi­vely with a wider range of shareholde­rs,” Dervishi said.

Claims of improperly marketing goods and services to 17 million on social welfare grants in SA

“We will continue to make our voice heard and exert pressure on the company to adhere to good lending principles to which the IFC is committed.”

Net1 was not immediatel­y available for comment.

The IFC and other shareholde­rs need to do more to scrutinise the company, said Bonita Meyersfeld, head of the Centre for Applied Legal Studies at Wits University.

“The source of their informatio­n cannot come solely from the company. Are they engaging with the grant beneficiar­ies?” said Meyersfeld, whose organisati­on is representi­ng the Black Sash in the court cases.

“The IFC is a developmen­t organisati­on that has rendered antiseptic a company that has made billions of rand off the poorest people in this country. As a developmen­t organisati­on it is disingenuo­us,” Meyersfeld added. – Bloomberg

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