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Data protection: Nigerian fintechs may be violating consumer rights

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SME Nigeria
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In its modern form, microfinancing became popular on a large scale in the 1970s. The first organization to receive attention was the Grameen Bank, which was started in 1976 by Muhammad Yunus in Bangladesh, a country in South Asia.

The business model of the Grameen bank emerged from the poor-focussed grassroots target. It has been studied over the years and is now a go-to-case study in economics and business schools around the world.

The Model

Groups of five prospective borrowers are formed; in the first stage, only two of them are eligible for, and receive, a loan. The group is observed for a month to see if the members are conforming to rules of the bank.

Only if the first two borrowers repay the principal plus interest over a period of fifty weeks do other members of the group become eligible themselves for a loan.

As a result of these restrictions, there is substantial group pressure to keep individual records clear. In this sense, collective responsibility of the group serves as collateral on the loan.

Modern day credit companies have now adopted digital channels to market loan services, provide loans, manage the loans and well as recover loans.

Truly, technology has the capacity to improve access to credit for individuals and MSMEs. Additionally, technology has the capacity to scale the Grameen Bank’s model whilst shrinking the fifty-week timeline to four weeks.

Why bother when there is data?

Digital credit companies in Nigeria have taken a different approach to ensure that loans are repaid with the help of technology whilst possibly violating the customers privacy and data rights and attacking the customers social reputation.

My investigation has shown that some digital credit companies in Nigeria access consumers contact list, messages and call records upon sign up. If the customer defaults on the loan, the credit company leverages access to the customers contacts.

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They randomly message the consumers contacts based on frequency of call or messages.

One can argue that this measure would make the customer pay, but it poses a potential for loss of income to the customer. Imagine that this customer has been chasing a certain business with a potential client and has called this client several times. The customers potential client receiving the above message may jeopardize that business opportunity.

It is particularly important for fintechs to leverage technology for sales and credit recovery but attacking client social reputation may just be making it difficult for the client to repay and would eventually discourage financial inclusion.

Recommendations

  1. Digital credit companies are advised to desist from collecting more-than-required data in line with GDPR. Access to consumer contact and call records is not legally required as part of the Central Bank’s KYC requirement.
  2. The Government is advised to develop a digital credit handbook for credit companies that expressly emphasizes consumer data protection in the modern age. The Central Bank of Kenya has commenced this process in 2020.
  3. Consumers are advised to avoid services that request access to their contact list upon registration.
  4. Digital credit companies could give consumers the capacity to select contacts to be communicated if they default. Random selection is just not acceptable.

Credit: Tochukwu Egesi

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