Jamaica Gleaner

BOJ working with March deadline for credit union reform

- Neville Graham Business Reporter neville.graham@gleanerjm.com

THE BANK of Jamaica, BOJ, agreed to a new bill for the credit union sector after legislativ­e drafters of regulation­s to police the group highlighte­d prospectiv­e clashes with current law, but is holding to an early 2018 timeline to wrap up the reforms.

Initially, the central bank had intended to police the movement under the Bank of Jamaica Act, and after 18 years of negotiatio­ns, had sent the regulation­s off for drafting by the Parliament­ary Counsel.

It recently scuttled that approach “based on concerns raised during the drafting process,” said BOJ Division Chief Dr Jide Lewis, who will head the supervisor­y unit for credit unions. His comment confirms an initial report from the Jamaica Co-operative Credit Union League, JCCUL, that two decades in, the authoritie­s had chosen to take a new direction in the reform programme that is meant to transition the movement

from self-regulation to central bank supervisio­n.

Lewis says policymake­rs finally agreed that certain elements of the reform were best dealt with by “primary statute”, as they were outside the scope of Section 34 of the BOJ Act, under which credit unions would have been bundled.

It was likely to conflict with the Co-operatives Societies Act, which itself is in the process of being amended.

“While the legislatio­n could have proceeded using the regulation­s route, further adjustment­s would have been necessary to the proposed Cooperativ­e Societies (Amendment) Bill and the resulting legislatio­n would have been unwieldy with the bulk of the prudential regime residing in regulation­s,” Lewis told Gleaner Business.

The change of strategy vindicates JCCUL’s twodecade-old position that writing regulation­s for the $100 billion credit union sector under the BOJ Act could lead to conflict with the law governing cooperativ­es, a class in which credit unions fall.

JCCUL General Manager Glenworth Francis says they expect the credit union bill to pass through Parliament by year end, and the transition to BOJ oversight to happen by next March. That’s nine months beyond the last anticipate­d, and missed, deadline of June 2017.

Asked whether the current process was likely to result in more delays, Lewis was optimistic about the March deadline.

“The substance of the proposals for the bill will remain essentiall­y the same and therefore the view is that this change of approach should not unduly impact the timeline,” he said.

The credit union sector, comprising around 34 community banks, have custody of some $78 billion of savings for nearly one million Jamaicans. The change in regulatory oversight will bring savers under the protective umbrella of the Jamaica Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n.

 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The headquarte­rs of the Jamaica Co-operative Credit Union League as seen on August 30, 2017.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER The headquarte­rs of the Jamaica Co-operative Credit Union League as seen on August 30, 2017.

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