UmsebenziOnlineBig.jpg

 

 

African Bank and credit for consumerism:

 

The collapse of a model

 

 

Alex Mashilo, Umsebenzi Online, Johannesburg, 14 August 2014

 

'.what appears as a crisis on the money-market is in reality an expression
of abnormal conditions in the very process of production and reproduction'
(Karl Marx, Capital, Vol. II)

 

This is the point various news reports and analyses have missed on the
collapse of the African Bank. The crisis levels of inequality, unemployment
and poverty persistent in SA are a part of, and indicative of, the 'abnormal
conditions in production and reproduction'. Amassing more and more
commodities on an immense scale, which is what capitalists do to accumulate
wealth on a private basis, is also one of the driving forces of consumerism
- the bling mentality. This is a product created by the conditions of
inequality. In the last two decades, it has been reinforced by the
neoliberal notion of individualism and became the mind-set of its victims.
The mentality mainly, but not exclusively, spread from the U.S., and was
fuelled by the rise of neoliberalism in the 1970s. In SA, our transition to
democracy in 1994 occurred in the aftermath of the rise, and the growing
dominance, of neoliberal globalisation. A tendency emerged in which sections
of our society wanted to possess belongings which they had never had before,
and to live a lifestyle which they had only seen on television. But with the
accumulation of possessions came the accumulation of debt. This is what the
African Bank was modelled to finance, not production, not development.

 

The collapse of the bank must be taken seriously. This is because it appears
to be the collapse of the model it was based on, as was the case with the
sub-prime lending crisis in the U.S. This problem, like a disease, became
contagious. Through the links it had with other bad banking practices,
interactions with other toxic financial products and all sorts of dealings
that were not backed by production, the contagion caused the biggest global
economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

 

Marx states in Capital that interest rates, that is the price charged for
money based on loans, are irrational because by and large they bear no
relation to any underlying production conditions. It must be added that the
irrationality becomes worse with exorbitant interest rates on short-term
loans, which is the space the African Bank has occupied in SA. In its
website
<http://africanbank.investoreports.com/capitec-and-abil-same-market-distinct
-methods/>  the African Bank states that it had about 2.6 million customers.

 

The South African Communist Party (SACP) and Financial Sector Coalition
Campaign (FSCC) have been leading a campaign for the transformation of the
financial sector to serve the people, rather than rip them off through,
among other things, exorbitant bank charges, high interest rates and
expropriation of their houses through repossessions and evictions - which
are frequently fraudulent. The campaign is also against reckless and
unsecured lending practices that lead to people becoming indebted. The
National Credit Regulator (NCR) was actually called upon and had
investigated the African Bank.

 

The regulator followed up by referring a case of reckless lending committed
by the bank to the National Consumer Tribunal, and called for a fine of R300
million with the final settlement being R20 million. When people take loans
without proper information, without capacity to repay the loan plus
interest, and when these loans are used for consumption and not to generate
additional income, then those people become over-indebted and will obviously
default. In addition, we have a problem in the structure of production in
SA. We are importing finished goods, while raw materials are a significant
proportion of our exports. We have a huge trade deficit. By the way most
African Bank loans were made to finance the consumption of luxury imported
goods. This does not help drive local production and enterprise development.
In Confronting Finance, Milford Bateman in his chapter titled 'The
Microfinance Delusion', shows that you cannot build an economy on
microfinance. He presents evidence conclusively underlining the fact that
microfinance does not help drive enterprise development.

 

Another general problem is unsecured lending which is not wrong in itself
but can have unintended consequences, depending on how it is being managed
and under what conditions it takes place. This involves issuing out loans
without security except for the incomes of the customers. Such loans are
vulnerable to interruptions in income conditions. As Marx states in Capital,
when their incomes are interrupted, consumers' spending is interrupted too.
When they are over-indebted, the interruption in spending also affects loan
plus interest repayments. In addition, the methods of debt collection do not
do any good. Once the debt collectors are brought in, the amount customers
owe increase exponentially due to the new charges imposed for collection.
People end up owing more and sinking deeper into debt, in addition to the
irrational interest rates that they suffer. How the Reserve Bank of SA will
manage collections after bailing out the African Bank will therefore be
interesting.

 

Meanwhile, there is this argument that the bailout is in the interest of
all. In class terms, those people who are indebted or over-indebted as a
result of loans - the lower middle class professionals, teachers, nurses,
etc., the workers and poor, are not being bailed out. They, according to the
deal, must continue to pay. Liberty Life, African Bank's second largest
investor, along with others, are the ones who are actually being bailed out.
After all, the African Bank functions like a middleman standing between
these investors and the indebted customers. Basically, the bank obtains
money from investors, passes it on to customers through loans, collects it
back with interest, keeps its cut and pays back the investors. The
Government Employees' Pension Fund managed by the Public Investment
Corporation is African Bank's largest investor. Only in this sense do public
servants stand to benefit from the bailout, even if indirectly. Another
class question: the Reserve Bank is buying ("nationalising") the bad book,
while the good book is left in private hands.   

 

But what do the major banks that have underwritten African Bank's bailout
stand to benefit?

 

This question must be understood in the context where, in addition, as shown
from Marx's Capital, the money used by banks as 'interest bearing capital'
'draws upon the money capital accumulated through the sale of commodity
capital, as well as the hoards ["money held for future purposes"] of
temporarily idle money of the industrial and commercial capitalists,
workers, the state or anyone else. These hoards and savings are collected
and centralised in the financial institutions, and transformed into
potential money capital on behalf of capital as a whole' (Marx's Capital,
5th ed., Ben Fine and Alfredo Saad-Filho). As Fine and Saad-Filho correctly
put it, this money 'is not, however the juridical property of these
institutions, and depositors are entitled to withdraw their funds (however,
different types of financial investment may incur temporary restrictions on
the ability to make withdrawals)'. And, indeed, as the authors further
underline, 'Banks normally extend credit over and above the levels of
deposits.' and, in addition still charge interest on loans issued from this
to make money out of nothing - the money they do not have.

 

Let us make a point in passing. The workers and the poor often receive far
less for their savings and investments with the banks than the banks make
from them in interest rates and bank charges through loans. In addition,
debt has been converted into a commodity. It is also being sold from hands
to hands through new financial instruments (such as securitisation). Those
who buy benefit in varying degrees. Interest rates adjustments and
collection charges play their role in this accumulation scheme.

 

There is no transparency on the question what the major banks that
underwritten African Bank's bailout stand to benefit. But one thing is
certain. There is something they stand to benefit - otherwise they are
exposed as a result of the problem, and are acting pre-emptively in
self-interest. We need the details.

 

It is also clear that the collapse of the African Bank is a result of weak
regulation in respect of reckless and unsecure lending practices if not
interference in implementing existing regulations. A joint statement issued
by the SACP and FSCC on Sunday calls on the NCR to perform its functions
without fear or favour and the National Treasury and Reserve Bank to stop
interfering in its work - particularly the curtailing of NCR's powers is
isolated. The two regulatory institutions are then called upon to strengthen
their regulatory hands. Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank said it was engaging
with the African Bank for almost a year if not more. The African Bank's
demise was foreseeable. Therefore we must ask: What role did the engagement
play to stop the crisis?

 

-   Alex Mashilo is SACP Spokesperson

 

 

From: http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4473#redpen

 

 

 

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