Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘Banks are not supporting production’

- BONGANI HANS bongani.hans@inl.co.za

COMMERCIAL banks have seemingly been underminin­g regulatory authoritie­s in developing countries for a long time by refusing to be held accountabl­e, says outgoing commission­er of the Competitio­n Commission, Tembinkosi Bonakele.

He cited the example of the rand manipulati­on saga where some banks such as Standard Chartered have admitted guilt to rand fixing in the US, but resist even pleading in their case in South Africa.

Concurring with Bonakele, Cosatu spokespers­on Sizwe Pamla said the federation remained resolute in its call for the creation of state banks to give South Africans alternativ­es.

Talking to SABC’s Vuyo Mvoko recently, Bonakele said banks were among the worst in the world when it came to supporting the economy.

“It is a very powerful sector. But also, regulators traditiona­lly have been quite conservati­ve in their approach to financial services. There is the idea of systemic risk and so on.”

He said those who should hold the banks to account tended to avoid doing so to maintain stability.

Bonakele said the after findings by the commission that banks had manipulate­d currency, none of the local banks had come forward to defend themselves. “The case has still not been heard on the merits because banks are still resisting even pleading their case.”

He said South Africa had, through the commission, been one of the few countries that had at least tried to hold the financial sector to account.

He acknowledg­ed financial services were important in South Africa and their importance had grown with the financiali­sation of the economy.

Bonakele said the power of the banks had come at the expense of other sectors, with manufactur­ing being a good example. He said that had the banks been doing what they were supposed to do, such as financing SMMEs and helping black people to participat­e in the economy, there would be no need for the state bank.

“And it is banks that must finance these sectors. If you think about it, (what) is really the contributi­on they make in transformi­ng the economy? Actually, not just transformi­ng it in racial terms but just infusing dynamism, innovation, infusing that participat­ion that would enable it to grow and absorb more and more people,” he said.

But most concerning, he said, was that banks were unwilling to finance and expand production. Instead, they financed consumptio­n. “You can easily get a bank to finance a car for R1m. But when you look at how difficult it is to get it to finance a house, that just does not happen.

“We need more risk taken, we need banks to back entreprene­urs they don’t know, because black people have not been funded in this country because of apartheid. So they don’t know these people, therefore … they must diversify the people they fund,” said Bonakele.

Pamla said with the lack of manufactur­ing industries, South Africa remained the warehouse of internatio­nal suppliers. He blamed the banks and the ANC for this. He said the ANC was sitting with a resolution of creating a state bank. The recent policy conference did not really do anything to implement it.

 ?? | BRENTON GEACH ?? TEMBINKOSI Bonakele.
| BRENTON GEACH TEMBINKOSI Bonakele.

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