Daily Dispatch

Wariness over state banks

- LINDA ENSOR

National treasury and the SA Reserve Bank have no objections to the creation of stateowned banks provided they are subject to the same legal and regulatory requiremen­ts as commercial banks.

Their views were expressed during public hearings held this week by parliament’s finance committee on the Banks Amendment Bill proposed by the EFF chief whip Floyd Shivambu.

Finance minister Nhlanhla Nene said in a letter to the committee the cabinet had already approved the Financial Matters Amendment Bill, which provided for stateowned banks on condition they were solvent and had government approval. These requiremen­ts were proposed to limit the fiscal risks state-owned banks could pose.

In a presentati­on, treasury chief director of financial stability and markets Roy Havemann said there were heightened risks for depositors’ money in a state bank because of the generally bad repayment culture (as at Eskom), problems with asset quality (Ithala Bank) and the fact that such banks often lent to single markets (Land Bank) that made their business model more risky.

Basa supports state banks provided they follow set guidelines

Reserve Bank head of policy, statistics and industry support Unathi Kamlana said the Bank was broadly comfortabl­e with the inclusion of state-owned banks into the banking sector but insisted that only stateowned companies with a solid track record of fiscal rectitude, solvency, liquidity and financial sustainabi­lity should be allowed to create such a stateowned bank.

The Banking Associatio­n SA (Basa) expressed concerns that a state-owned bank could engender systemic risk for the banking sector if it were to capture the accounts of public servants.

Basa said safeguards would have to be put in place to prevent the state imposing laws or regulation­s that compelled other state institutio­ns to only hold accounts with the state-owned bank.

Nobambo Mlandu, Basa’s representa­tive, raised concern about the additional burden on the fiscus in relation to the initial and ongoing funding and licence obligation­s of such a bank.

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