A
Banking expert is advocating the establishment of a Financial Ombudsman in
Ghana to serve the needs of financial consumers.
Nana
Otuo Acheampong says such entity, with offices nationwide, offers consumers independent
and impartial service in resolving disputes with financial institutions.
About
35 countries currently have such ombudsman services for their financial services
industry.
“The
idea of an ombudsman is an independent referee between consumers and supplies
and they are able to articulate the position where one party is not happy with
a service that they have received and resolve it”, said Nana Otuo.
An
estimated 70 percent of the Ghanaian population are still not attracted to the
banking and financial services sector.
According
to Nana Otuo Acheampong, the non-availability of an independent institution to
address grievances of financial mistrust could partly be attributed to the large
unbanked population.
“Presently
that responsibility resides in the Bank of Ghana and I think they have one
responsibility too many; it should be taken out of there and given to an
independent ombudsman established by an Act of Parliament and that would
improve the financial services sector”, he noted.
The
banking expert has also called for the rationalization of the financial
services regulatory regime.
There
are currently four regulatory institutions; the Bank of Ghana for the banks,
Securities and Exchange Commission for capital markets and investments,
National Insurance Commission for insurance, and the National Pension Regulatory
Authority for pensions.
“We
can rationalize and have maybe one or two regulators for the financial services
industry as a whole rather than each sector with its own regulator”, stated
Nana Otuo Acheampong, Head of the Osei Tutu II Centre for Executive Education
and Research (OTCEER).
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
1 comment:
Thank you , Chris, I found this exercise highly interesting.
Financial Services
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