Daily Dispatch

Growing opposition to draft bill targeting debt relief

- By LINDA ENSOR BDLive

PARLIAMENT’S trade and industry committee is in the final stages of processing a draft bill providing debt relief for heavily indebted consumers, which remains substantia­lly unchanged‚ despite strong opposition from the banking sector.

The committee is expected to conclude its deliberati­ons on the draft National Credit Amendment Bill once parliament resumes work after the winter recess at the end of next month.

The bill proposes giving the National Consumer Tribunal the power to extinguish debt under certain circumstan­ces.

The targeted group for the envisaged debt relief would be individual­s earning a gross monthly income of not more than R7 500‚ who have no readily realisable assets (excluding exempted items mentioned in the bill)‚ are not subject to debt review and have debt of less than R50 000 excluding interest and charges.

The minister can review the income and asset thresholds from time to time by means of a notice in the government gazette. The banking sector is not in favour of the proposed bill‚ which it says will harm lower-income groups because credit providers would limit the extension of credit to them in a bid to limit their risk.

Banks say they have their own debt relief measures in place.

Retailers are also opposed to the bill. The bill’s opponents warn that providing debt relief as proposed will entail moral hazard as it would foster a culture of non-payment and drive up the cost of credit. The committee has published specific clauses of the bill for additional public comment.

These deal with the powers of the court to reduce interest rates‚ charges and fees to zero for a period of five years; consultati­on between the minister of trade and industry and the minister of finance on funding for financial literacy, and capability programmes by means of the imposition of a levy on financial service providers; and adjustment­s to income and debt thresholds.

DA spokesman on trade and industry Dean Macpherson said the DA was very opposed to the proposal to empower the minister to review income and asset thresholds.

“We are absolutely firm that this should go through parliament. It is a committee bill and therefore the committee needs to take responsibi­lity for it‚ It can’t outsource its responsibi­lity to the minister‚” he said.

The DA is also opposed to the proposal in the bill which would make the National Credit Regulator (NCR) a de facto debt counsellor as well as being a regulator‚ which it regards as a conflict of interest.

“Extinguish­ing debt would increase the cost of credit to everyone and restrict access to credit as credit providers impose tighter conditions on credit extension.” —

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