Sunday Times

You do still need to provide proof of income when you apply for credit

- Angelique Ardé

If you’re in the market for credit, you shouldn’t get too excited about a recent high court ruling scrapping part of the regulation­s under the National Credit Act. Two of the county’s biggest unsecured lenders will continue to rely on payslips or bank statements as part of their affordabil­ity assessment­s.

The much-discussed judgment, by Acting Judge Keith Engers, stems from a successful applicatio­n by some clothing retailers to set aside regulation­s spelling out how credit providers must validate the income of consumers applying for credit.

In spite of the scrapping of the subregulat­ion, African Bank’s chief risk officer, Piet Swanepoel, says the bank will still require payslips as part of its assessment, and Charl Nel, head of communicat­ions at Capitec, says Capitec believes that “the latest salary slips and/or bank statements are the most reliable documents to accurately verify a client’s income”.

It has been incorrectl­y reported in the media that the judgment means you’ll no longer have to provide proof of income when applying for credit. That’s not what the judgment means: it means credit providers are no longer compelled to use payslips and bank statements as validation of income. The act gives credit providers the discretion to determine their own affordabil­ity assessment­s, provided the model they use results in a fair and objective assessment of what you can afford. When you apply for credit you will still have to provide some proof of income.

The regulation­s that were the subject of the court case were introduced in March 2015 after it became apparent to the minister of trade and industry that affordabil­ity assessment­s being used by credit providers were not sufficient to reduce reckless lending.

In terms of the subregulat­ions that have been set aside, credit providers had to validate gross income by way of your three latest salary slips or bank statements showing your salary deposits if you are a salaried employee; and your three latest bank statements or financial statements if you are self-employed, informally employed or employed but don’t receive a payslip or proof of income.

In setting aside the provisions for validating gross income, Engers said they imposed on credit providers “a rigid set of requiremen­ts” which discrimina­ted against consumers who don’t have bank accounts and who are informally or self-employed. He used the example of a flower seller who doesn’t have a bank account and is not likely to have financial statements. On the basis of regulation 23(A)(4) of the National Credit Act, such a person would be excluded from accessing credit even though they could in fact afford the credit.

The National Credit Regulator’s alarmist statement that the judgment removes the income verificati­on requiremen­ts from the regulation­s is only partly true; the regulation­s are subordinat­e to the act, and the act stands: a credit agreement is reckless if, at the time that the agreement was made, the credit provider failed to conduct an affordabil­ity assessment.

In the judge’s words, scrapping the subregulat­ion does not do away with the credit provider’s need to ascertain the consumer’s gross income as a step towards calculatin­g discretion­ary income. Engers also said the applicants had not made a good case for the setting aside of other subregulat­ions, namely, the one stating that if your gross income varies, the credit provider must use an average over the previous three months and another which states that you must provide “authentic documentat­ion” to a credit provider to enable it to assess whether you can afford the credit.

I think it’s a shame that the subregulat­ion detailing how you must prove your income was scrapped. But what the judgment reveals about how the regulation­s came into being is even more shameful; it reflects poorly on Minister of Trade and Industry Rob Davies.

The judgment says “a great number of” organisati­ons, businesses and individual­s commented on the draft regulation­s after these were published by the minister for public comment in August 2014.

The judge says changes were made to the subregulat­ion with Capitec’s proposed wording appearing almost word for word in the final regulation­s.

These revised regulation­s were not circulated to stakeholde­rs and interested parties for further comment. While the minister is not obliged to republish final regulation­s for further comment, the judge says where the minister changes the draft regulation­s in a material respect, doing so is advisable, if not necessary. If this was done, the court case would have been avoided.

The judge says the minister changed “what appeared to be a fairly flexible requiremen­t into a far more rigid and stringent one”, and that there are indication­s that the minister might not have taken account of public input. “The record of decision does not bear out that the consolidat­ed comments of the DTI were placed before the minister for considerat­ion,” the judgment says.

The DTI did not respond to requests for comment. But the NCR’s company secretary, Lesiba Mashapa, says the regulator is considerin­g appealing the judgment as the regulation was an important tool in the fight against reckless lending and borrowing.

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