COSATU backs court action against loan sharks
The Congress of South African Trade Unions supports the court action presently being taken on behalf of workers who have fallen victim to South Africa's unsecured lending industry, who see their wages disappear even before they get them, via "emolument attachment orders' (EAOs), commonly known as "garnishee orders", that force an employer to deduct money owed to a creditor from a person's monthly salary.
The market for unsecured personal loans has quadrupled over the past six years, to R164 billion, 11% of all loans in the country. And about 25% of unsecured loans were ‘nonperforming' - meaning that they hadn't been repaid in three months or more - up from 14% in March 2012.
The default rate in the past six years has hovered around 16%, but jumped by almost 10% in 2014. The African Bank has already had to be bailed out by the Reserve Bank, after it faced bankruptcy as it had too many ‘non-performing' leans, which is could not recover.
Thousands of workers' families are stuck in a debt trap, as a consequence of this reckless lending, by both established banks, and ‘mashonisa' loan sharks, who get their money back by deducting debt repayments, plus exorbitant interest charges, from the workers' wages through EAOs.
The plight of the debtors is made worse as a result of decades of financial exclusion under apartheid. Most Black South Africans don't have deeds to their homes, to use as collateral. Even other assets, such as cars, were often also bought with money from the unsecured loan market so they can't then use them as collateral either.