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Government Must Tackle Seriously This Outrageous Interest Rates

Wed, 3 Nov 2010 Source: Ofosu-Appiah, Ben

" Deposit your money with a commercial bank in Ghana and the interest you earn on it

can be as low as 7%. Borrow money from a commercial bank in Ghana and you will be

faced with an interest rate of 30% or higher." This was how a friend recently put

it. Why are interest rates in Ghana so outrageously high and the Bank of Ghana and

the government not doing anything about it?

I had a discussion with a friend about this ridiculously high interest rates charged

in Ghana "legally" by the banks operating in Ghana and we were both shocked to

realise that Ghana has the highest interest rates in Africa and the second highest

interest rates in the World second only to Brazil. Even loan sharks don't charge

that much in many countries across the globe.

For example, six months ago Standard Chartered Bank was paying 8.13% interest to

depositors and giving out loans with 29.5% interest. Figures released by the Central

Bank of Ghana in February show that the average interest rate on deposits for

households was as low as 6.91%. Even more shocking is the mortagage rate on housing

loans contracted in Ghana. The average mortgage rate in Ghana now ranges from 35% to

40% on a 10 year mortgage. So if you borrow 100,000 Ghana Cedis for a 10 year

period, by the end of the first year alone you owe the bank about 140,000 Ghana

Cedis. This is crazy to say the least ! By the end of the 10 year period you might

have paid the bank more than 400% of what you originally borrowed. I don't think the

property you built would have increased in value by that much. And why is the

government and the Bank of Ghana not acting to bring these rates down? Commercial

banking has become the fastest way second only to political corruption to make quick

money

in Ghana no wonder there are all kinds of Banks operating in the country now.

As long as that huge gap between deposit rates and interest rates continues to

exist, Ghana's economy will continue to be stifled. Ghana is reported as having the

highest interest rate spread in Africa, and the highest lending rates in Africa,

coming second only to Brazil globally and this does not prick the conscience of the

powers that be. Needless to say, these high lending rates is stifling economic

development and causing credit crunch as people cannot afford to borrow. It is time

the Central Bank of Ghana stepped in to bring sanity into the banking sector. The

government and bank of Ghana are unwittingly condoning and conniving with these

unscrupulous banks to rip off Ghanaians by their failure to act.

It was reported recently that the Bank of Ghana as the regulator of banking

practices in Ghana announced a new base rate of 16% down from 18% but most

commercial banks in the country charge twice or even more that much. Has the Bank of

Ghana lost its moral authority to keep these commercial banks in line? The

commercial banks operating in the country owe it a duty to themselves and to the

nation to lower the cost of borrowing. The current state of affairs where Ghana has

the highest lending rate in Africa and the second highest in the World is not

tenable. The BoG must place a legal cap on interest rates in Ghana and strictly

enforce it.

The high interest rates are stifling the productive sectors of the economy as it

makes the cost of doing business too ecessive and businessmen can't pass the

benefits of their business to consumers in the form of lower prices. Businesses in

these sectors such as Agriculture and manufacturing are unable to borrow to expand

their businesses and this is worsening the unemployment situation in the country and

the few who are employed cannot enjoy the fruits of their labour in the form of

higher wages all because of the high cost of doing business. We need to work towards

a situation where people who are credit worthy should be able to borrow money to

expand their businesses without being unduly restraint by the high cost of

borrowing. That's one way the economy can expand and all can benefit from the

"better Ghana" agenda.

To make this a reality, the government should put in place economic policies to

reduce inflation and stabilise the national currency, in that way the BoG can reduce

its prime rate, and that in turn means commercial banks can borrow at a lower cost

and be in a position to lend to its customers at a reduced rate. In the past,

commercial banks have not responded to the central bank's reduction in the base rate

by lowering its own lending rate. Moral suasion alone from the central bank has not

been effective. The Bank of Ghana is empowered by law to go beyond this approach

towards regulating interest rates and should oblige banks to stay within a limit in

terms of interest rates.

Ghanaian businesses cannot wait forever for the moral conscience of the commercial

banks to trigger a favourable response from the calls for a reduction in the

interest rates, the Bank of Ghana may have to crack the whip--or watch helplessly as

the banks continue to hold their customers to ransom. Ideally access to credit must

be a right and if commercial banks are charging close to 40% as interest rates then

how much will non banking institutions charge? At the moment that is close to 70%.

It is the responsibility of the government to protect its citizens from the

nefarious activities of loan sharks masquerading as commercial banks.

Ben Ofosu-Appiah,

Tokyo-Japan.

The author is a senior policy strategist and political and social analyst based in

Tokyo. he welcomes your comments.

Columnist: Ofosu-Appiah, Ben