Bank Regulators in Africa in the wake of the financial meltdown: When Ignorance is Bliss.
While answering questions from a panel of journalists about the risk exposure of Financial Institutions (F.I) in Cameroun and Countries of the BEAC region to the financial crisis, the finance minister of Cameroon said with such bravado that the risk was non-existant. He further explained that there was no risk whatsoever because banks in the BEAC zone were not allowed to invest in all those toxic assets that brought major financial institutions down.
However, he failed to mention the exposure of the Central Bank to the same toxic assets that translated in a huge loss in million of Euros. But the explanation given by the Finance Minister was applauded as some kind of foresighting of the upcoming trouble. That type of Monday morning quarterbacking is somewhat intriguing because it makes it seems that Banks in the BEAC Zone and elsewhere in the SSA region were not allowed to invest in those types of vehicles because the regulating body (COBAC) already knew they were toxic (highly doubtful). Or was it simply because the regulators could not understand them to begin with, since those complex financial instruments required a high level of monitoring and risk assessment structures ?
In hindsight, we can all appreciate financial institutions all over the World that while able to comprehend and have access to some very complex financial instruments, chose very carefully when and what to invest in. But I cannot co-sign ignorance being used as a sign of wisdom when it’s obvious African F.I didn’t participate in the feast because the regulators couldn’t figure out what the hell was on the menu.

