Is Credit Really King? A West African’s View!

10

Cut Your Coat According To Your Cloth

I grew up in a culture that solely approved living within your means and spending money you have in hand or your bank account. Loans/credit lines from my bird’s eye view were purely meant for entrepreneurs and businesses looking to expand their businesses to serve a wider customer base and also to gain more disposable income to purchase more products.

 

Loans Are For Businesses!

Coincidentally, I worked as a Communications and Marketing Manager at an international microfinance bank in Nigeria and had a general understanding of the operations of credit and loans, especially for Micro, Small, Medium Enterprises (MSME’s).

The loan eligibility criteria were pretty much straight forward, “own a business, be in the business location for at least 3 years, be between 18 – 60 years of age, be a Nigerian Citizen or a resident for at least 10 years.” Some more stringent rules did apply especially those related to providing collateral, having your business appraised, review of profit & loss statements, past loan history, repayment records with a minimum risk ratio, presenting viable business guarantors among others.

Other than securing loans for business projects, I had never been inclined to take any loans. This is as a result of our culture or my principle of spending what I have, hence, when individual and Staff credit facilities were made available, I usually opted to work with cash in hand or resort to traditional funding sources such as support from family/friends if ever required. The thought of taking out personal loans was just not “a thing” and coincidentally the economy I was exposed to was not built on the foundation of individual credit.

West African Culture of Credit

Don’t get me wrong, the world is a global village and much of the influences from the western culture are now gravitating to different parts of the world including West Africa. Even though individual credit scores (as is the case in Europe and North America) does not exactly influence your access to personal loans or business loans, your repayment history for past loans does. No financial institution would be willing to issue loans to an individual or business with a high-risk portfolio.

Today, telecommunications providers in West Africa now offer users a credit line where they can borrow digital credits to make calls and buy data, using credit purchase patterns as the model for lending airtime to users. With telecoms providers now offering airtime credits, it is only but a matter of time before the financial services sector goes full swing into issuing individual credits and using scores as a guarantee to issue loans in the future. The huge question mark however would be how the financial institutions will define credit models for the African consumer that would take into consideration the growing poverty index and access to individual disposable income.

What’s Your Credit Score?

It is an entirely different ball game out here in the North American region where “credit is king” and holds the key to accessing loans for basic to complex facilities such as accommodation, mortgages, auto, or school loans, among others. Most scholars have defined credit to mean “a customer’s ability to obtain goods or services before payment based on trust that payment will be made in the future.” The key element to note here in building great credit scores is in “making the payments.”

I am quickly getting the hang of the Credit score concept and the importance of building good credit ratings and the role this plays in your ability to access facilities in the future. There are basic credit card usage models that newcomers like me must keep in mind to ensure you do not build more debt than you can handle and a horrible credit score rating.

Method To This Madness

  • Use your Credit Card – Make regular/basic purchases such as shopping for groceries, paying your phone bills, and basic day-to-day payments with your credit card. This is how you start to build your credit usage!
  • Research – I read in Will Roundtree’s book called “Credit is King: Transforming Your Credit to Royalty” that you should not spend more than 30% of your available credit, as this can affect your credit score. So do your research and be sure to have access to information to guide your credit card usage especially if like me, it has never been a tradition of yours. Better to know enough, than nothing, and fall into debt.
  • Pay Back – Be sure to pay back the money borrowed or “credit” before the due date as interest rates start to kick in for every late payment. So, here’s a simple model I devised for this, I have XYZ physical cash in my account and an XYZ credit limit. If I spend ABC to buy groceries, I must be sure to have the ABC equivalent in my deposited XYZ physical cash to repay. Now, do you get it? You cannot use your credit card as a long-term loan as it does have long term debt repercussions.
  • Pay in full – If you pay up your balance in full rather than fractions on or before the due date, you do not get charged any interest. Take note that delayed payments and fractional payments could earn you higher interest rates. Resist the urge to utilize credit without repaying!

Once you have mastered the basic rules that apply to the use of credit cards and how to build good credit scores, the world would be your oyster! What are some of your experiences in a world where “credit is king?”

Feel free to share in the comments section!

Share.

About Author

Nkechi is a brand & marketing strategist, storyteller, globe trotter, and avid bathroom singer. She writes short prose when motivated and blogs about her personal experiences from across the world. Follow her on Twitter @kechy004

10 Comments

  1. Good one on learning quickly about credit score! Some really good apps to help as well.

    I always imagine how a system like that would work in say Nigeria.. although this idea of ‘local currency of integrity’ is available with smaller transactions but people still fear bank Credit/loans because the system in my opinion doesn’t make as attractive for individuals.

    • Thanks Oghosa! For individual credit to work in Nigeria, the lending models would have to be adaptive and I do not see this happening across the entire population when poverty still plagues about 40% of the Nigerian population. While I was in the microfinance industry, most of the Islamic lending models offered zero interest rates to it’s customers while the more formal institutions offered competitive rates to pull customers to take their services. This might just be the model should we some day decide to tilt to a credit dependent economy in future. Thanks for sharing your thoughts 😊

  2. I wish this post was written 7 years ago! Credit is king if you live in the West. Looking forward to similar financial practices over here

  3. A synergy of both cultures makes for a better credit card utilizer. However, there are still a few that get carried away.
    You pointed out the key to maintaining good credit. Personally, I feel credit has its advantages and disadvantages .

  4. In Nigeria, Credit score, credit ratings & a clean Credit report from @ least 3 credit bureaus of an individual is always considered in determining if a loan will be approved or not; but not as a guarantee or collateral as in developed world.

    Sadly the average Nigerian never wants to pay back loans. They see Bank loans as government money which should be unaccounted for.

    Thanks to the CBN GSI( Global Standing Instruction) managed by NIBSS which commenced on the 1st of August gives banks the power to debit loan and accrued interest due from bank accounts of loan defaulters across the Nigerian banking system using customer’s Bank Verification Number (BVN) .

    A lot of Defaulters aren’t finding it funny anymore.😂😂😂

    • It is poor financial planning that makes most people default on loans. There are no structured accounting or bookkeeping done by some of the small businesses which puts them in a bad position to know what their revenue is and use same as a basis for requesting a loan. You cannot fund a business that has very low turnover. How do you then make your repayments without defaults?

Leave A Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.