How Moses Kuria is planning to subject people to higher loan repayment rates

Commercial banks will be allowed to charge higher interest on customer loans based on their assessment of default risk in proposed amendments to the controversial rate cap law.

The new loan pricing model proposed by Gatundu South Member of Parliament Moses Kuria will allow banks to raise the cost of loans up to six percentage points above the Central Bank Rate (CBR) from the current four percentage points.

The benchmark rate now stands at nine percent, implying the draft law would set the stage for an increase in loan charges from the current 13 percent to 15 percent.

The draft legislation, however, proposes the retention of the four percentage points ceiling on loan charges above the CBK base rate for “low risk” borrowers.

“I wish to introduce an amendment to the Banking Act to introduce a risk negotiation window of up to six percent above the lending cap for SMEs and unsecured individuals to negotiate pricing based on their risk profile and on a willing buyer, willing seller basis,” said Mr Kuria in a letter dated 14th January 2019 to the Speaker of the National Assembly, Justin Muturi, while introducing the content of his Bill.

Kenya introduced interest rate controls in September 2016 with the enactment of a law that limits lending rates to not more than four percentage points above the CBR in response to the high cost of credit that saw banks lend to private businesses and individuals at more than 20 percent.

 

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