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After a series of agitations,
customers of some of the microfinance companies in the Brong Ahafo
Region can now heave a sigh of relief as the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has now
taken a firm decision to ensure that their deposits, which have been
locked up in the companies, are paid.
The central bank has now
decided to liquidate the assets of two of the microfinance companies and
use the proceeds to pay the deposits of the customers.
The companies are the DKM Microfinance Company and Jasta Motors.
The central bank is taking steps to appoint an official liquidator to begin the process of liquidation.
At
a public forum in Sunyani yesterday to discuss issues affecting
microfinance companies in the Brong Ahafo Region, officials of the
central bank asked the affected customers to exercise patience and allow
the regulator to find a way of paying back their deposits.
The customers are demanding the payment of their deposits from the microfinance companies.
At
the forum, the Head of the Bank Supervision Department of the BoG, Mr
Raymond Amanfu, said most of the microfinance companies had no operating
licences so their assets had been frozen.
The forum was attended by some traditional rulers and customers of the affected companies.
There was heavy security presence as the detained directors of some the companies were brought to the forum and later sent away.
At the open forum, most of the questions centred on how the affected customers were going to get their deposits paid to them.
Mr
Amanfu said the BOG was doing all it could to ensure that customers’
deposits were refunded to them hence the decision to liquidate the
companies’ assets and repay customers’ deposits to them.
The
forum was necessitated by series of agitations by customers of some
microfinance companies who have been demanding the payment of the
deposits they had lodged with the companies.
In the wake of the
agitations, the central bank revoked the licences of 70 microfinance
companies in the country to, among others, sanitise the banking system.
Banking
experts say that microfinance schemes, if not properly regulated, will
operate like Ponzi schemes that lock up the capital of depositors.
“Sometimes
they become scams in which the gullible public is enticed with the
promise of very high returns in a very short time, but are based on
paying off the early investors with the cash from (hopefully, the
ever-increasing number of) new investors. The whole structure collapses
when the cash outflow exceeds the cash inflow,” they said.
The originators of the scheme, however, usually disappear with large sums a few days before the crash.
Named
after Charles Ponzi (1882-1949), an Italian immigrant to the US who,
during 1919-20, collected more than $15 million from some 40,000 eager
people by promising to double their investment in 90 days but was unable
to do so.
DKM Microfinance
Addressing the opening
session, Mr Amanfu explained that DKM Microfinance was given a licence
on October 25, 2013, to operate and started submitting reports to the
central bank from June 2014.
Later, the regulator observed that
the microfinance had recorded an increase in its deposits — a
development which prompted the BoG to investigate it.
During the
initial investigation, the bank observed that DKM Microfinance Company
was paying an interest rate of 30 per cent every three months and,
therefore, advised it to reduce the rate to 17 per cent.
Fun clubs
He
said further investigations conducted by the central bank revealed that
some of the fun clubs which had sprung up in parts of the Brong Ahafo
Region were related to DKM Microfinance Company.
“We sent
external auditors to audit the company and collected monies from the
Sunyani, Bolgatanga, Wa, Berekum and Wenchi branches of the company and
sent them to the BOG after counting the monies in the presence of
management of the company”, he explained.
Government
Mr
Amanfu denied reports that the government had collected money from the
company to finance development projects, saying “It is not true that
government has taken the money for development projects”.
Touching on the issue of God Is Love Fun Club, he said the case was before the court and had been adjourned to January 29, 2016.
On
Perfect Edge Company, he said the company had no operating licence but
the BoG could not trace it. He said it was after the company’s account
was frozen that the management appeared.
He added that it was found out that Jasta Motors was operating as a hire-purchase company so its account was not frozen.
Political parties
The
government and the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) in the Brong
Ahafo Region are engaged in a blame game over the operations of
microfinance companies in the region.
The situation compelled the
NPP Members of Parliament (MPs) from the region to call for the arrest
and prosecution of directors of fraudulent microfinance institutions and
fan clubs whose fraudulent operations in the region had robbed the
people of their lifetime savings.
Meanwhile some officials of the microfinance companies have been arrested and arraigned.
Three
persons arrested by the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI) in
connection with the operation of some microfinance companies have been
put before the Accra Circuit Court.
They are Monica Afriyie,
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of God Is Love Fun Club; Nortey Noel, a
businessman who is also an associate of Monica and Charles Asum, the
founder of Jasta Motors and Investment Company.
A fourth accused person, Martin K. Dele, the Director of DKM Diamond Microfinance Company, has also been arrested.
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