Twelve
months ago I published a report as the independent external reviewer of a
Banking Taskforce initiative into the new ‘appeals process’ – a process by
which small businesses (up to a turnover of £25 million) could appeal if
declined lending from their bank.
In the
first year of the process there were 2177 appeals and 39.5% of decisions were
overturned. (An overturn is where the bank and the customer reach a
satisfactory conclusion to a lending application.) This does not mean that the
business has received exactly what they asked for initially, but that they have
reached a lending agreement with which both parties are satisfied.
At the
time I was quite satisfied with the numbers, given that the process was still
in its infancy. I said then that banks and all other parties and bodies
involved in working with SMEs needed to do more to ensure that their business
customers knew that the right to appeal was available, and that the true effectiveness
of the scheme would be apparent only when the process had been more widely
promoted. I said also that the banks needed to make sure that those who lend
are properly qualified and trained to do so, and that the reasons why a loan
may be declined need to be properly communicated and understood.
Next
month I will publish my second Annual report and while further progress has
undoubtedly been made, there are clearly still issues with the extent to which
the appeals process is being promoted, both externally and within the banks
themselves.
The
ambition with the process was to encourage and engender a better dialogue
between customers and the banks, and my report will show to what extent this is
now being achieved. My report will also look at the key reasons why loans are
being declined – both through credit scores and issues of ‘affordability’ – and
what progress is being made to better understand the banks’ scoring system and
the role of external credit reference agencies.
The
ultimate objective is to make the lending environment for SMEs operate as
smoothly as any lending environment ever can or has. We will soon see how far
we have travelled in reaching this objective.
Professor
Russel Griggs OBE
You made some good points there. I looked on the internet for the subject matter and found most individuals will consent with your site.
ReplyDeleteSmall Business Loan