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FINANCIAL REPRESSION AND FINANCIAL REFORM IN UGANDA

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FINANCIAL REPRESSION AND FINANCIAL REFORM IN UGANDA
FINANCIAL REPRESSION AND FINANCIAL REFORM IN UGANDA
Martin Brownbridge

Summary
The banking system in Uganda is among the weakest in Sub-Saharan Africa. Its liabilities comprise less than 10 per cent of GDP, it is highly oligopolistic and inefficient in performing many basic banking functions, and the largest bank and several smaller banks are insolvent.
The financial policies of the pre-reform period aimed to control banking markets, ostensibly for developmental and other non commercial objectives. These policies had very damaging effects on the banking system. Financial repression deterred the public from holding bank deposits. A large government owned bank was operated with very little regard for commercial principals and accumulated a massive portfolio of bad debts as a result. The role of the foreign banks, which at least provided a basic, if limited, range of banking services, was sharply curtailed when they sold most of their branches to the public sector banks. The neglect of prudential regulation allowed mismanagement to become widespread, not just in the government banks but also among some of the newer banks established in the late 1980s by the private sector.
The financial sector reforms of the 1990s are intended to remedy the consequences of the previous two decades of misguided financial policies. The second contention of this paper is that these objectives are likely to prove very difficult to attain because of the scale of the problems which the banking sector inherited from the pre-reform era, and especially because of the dominant market position of the public sector banks.

The author is a former IDS Research Officer. At the time of publication (June 1996) he was working for
UNCTAD (Division for Least Developed Countries) in Geneva, Switzerland.

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FINANCIAL REPRESSION AND FINANCIAL REFORM IN UGANDA1
Martin Brownbridge

1

INTRODUCTION

The banking system in Uganda is among the weakest in Sub-Saharan Africa.



References: Bank of Uganda, 1994, Quarterly Economic Report, 4, October-December Harvey, Charles, 1993, ’The role of commercial banking in recovery from economic disaster Harvey, Charles and Robinson, Mark, 1995, ’Economic reform and political liberalisation in Uganda’, IDS Research Report, 29, Brighton, Sussex: Institute of Development Studies Henstridge, Mark, 1994, ’Stabilisation policy and structural adjustment in Uganda: 1987-90’ Kibirango, Leo and Kasekende, L.A., 1992, ’Economic and financial sector issues’, Uganda Institute of Bankers Journal, December, pp 29-32 Mukwanason, Hyuha, 1994, ’Interest rate policy and the saving-investment process in Uganda: a policy stance’, Uganda Institute of Bankers Journal, 2 (1): 20-25 Musinguzi, Polycarp, 1995, ’The effectiveness of monetary and financial instruments in Uganda’s reform efforts’, The Ugandan Banker, 3 (1): 35-38 Nsereko, Joseph, 1995, ’Problems of non-performing advances’, The Ugandan Banker, 3 (1): 26-35 Sharer, Robert L., De Zoysa, Hema R. and McDonald, Calvin A., 1995, ’Uganda: adjustment with growth, 1987-94’, Occasional Paper, 121, Washington, D.C.: IMF World Bank, 1985, Uganda: Progress Towards Recovery and Prospects for Development, Report 5595-UG, Washington, D.C.: World Bank World Bank, 1993, Uganda: Growing Out of Poverty, Report 11380-UG, Washington,

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