Over-Staffing Contributed To uniBank Collapse-Report

 

A new document shows that the now defunct uniBank was overstaffed compared to its others in the banking sector, causing a drain on the financials of the company.

According to the document, uniBank prior to the revocation of its license had 811 permanent staff, 64 contract staff , 990 outsourced staff and 79 National Service Staff for a bank with just 54 branches.

That was not all, the bank also had related entities whose staff depended on it for financial support.

In the breakdown, the permanent staff of the related entities were 1,284, contract staff of 244, outsourced staff 200 and 20 National Service personnel.

In total, the employees that depended on the financials of the bank were 3,692, even though the bank’s output was less, compared to the total staff strength.

It is anticipated that most of these employees have been affected by the revocation of the license of the bank, as they no longer work for the bank.

The document stated that “whilst elements of peer benchmarking analysis has its limitations, it appears that the bank has a number of underperforming branches, is overstaffed, and has materially higher cost base than its peers”.

In addition, the bank had the worst cost income ratio compared with five banks in the document.

This means that when you compare the bank’s cost in relation to its income—which includes administrative and fixed cost like salaries, the bank was spending more than its income.

Also, uniBank had the worst Non-staff cost percentage of its operating expenses.

By this, the bank’s day-to-day operational spending was badly managed, causing the institution to lose a lot of money.

Exposure to local banks

The ripple effect of the activities of uniBank showed that the financials of five other banks are currently being impacted negatively.

The document categorically pointed out that “uniBank’s financial position presents significant system risks to Ghana’s financial sector stability given the contagion effect it presents to other financial institutions, pension funds and significant amounts of employees who will all be affected”.

It appears not only the five banks are exposed to unibank’s financials. The Bank of Ghana was estimated to be exposed to uniBank to the tune of 3.25 billion cedis as at May 2018.

International exposure

uniBank owes 71.8 million dollars to six international institutions(names withheld).

The document warned that not paying these balances could significantly erode investor confidence in Ghana.

Also it added that Ghana’s credit risk ratings could be impacted, placing further pressure on the financial sector and wider economy.

“Given recent failures of UT Bank and Capital Bank, this risk is heightened,” it stressed.

citinewsroom