Abstract:
In recent years, more stringent regulations governing Savings and Credit Co operatives (SACCOs) have been adopted. One such regulation is capping of capital
adequacy requirements which compel Deposit-Taking SACCOs (DTSs) to maintain a
minimum of Ksh. 10 million of members’ deposit as core capital to cushion against
losses that may result from operational risks. A key objective of this regulation is to
enhance resilience of SACCOs to these risks. And while regulators pursue resilience,
this often comes at a cost to efficiency. We undertook a study to examine the impact of
the capital adequacy requirement on the efficiency of SACCO operations. In the study,
we investigated the relationship between capital adequacy requirements and capital
efficiency of DTSs. Adopting a positivism research philosophy and a correlational
research design; we employed regression analysis to determine the relationship
between capital adequacy requirements and the capital efficiency of DTSs. We
measured the level of capital efficiency of each SACCO using Data Envelopment
Analysis (DEA). The study found DTSs capital efficiency to have a negative but not
significant relationship with core capital. DTSs meeting the core capital of Ksh. 10M
and more did not enjoy better efficiency compared to those not meeting the prescribed
threshold despite not being significant. The findings imply that achieving compliance
is negatively affecting the capital efficiency of DTSs. Imposing of strict regulations on
DTSs hinders their ability to use inputs in optimal proportions to allocate their scarce
resources resulting in lower returns. Furthermore, DTSs having a core capital of
Ksh.10 Million and more have excess liquidity funds than they should hold. Holding of
these idle funds may imply inefficient utilization of resources by the DTSs. We
recommend that the regulator re-examine the capital adequacy requirements with the
goal of establishing the most optimal levels that guarantees safety of members deposits
and resilience of the SACCOs while optimizing on efficiency.