Tag: Hustler Fund Loan

  • Nowhere To Hide: Govt Begins Tracing Hustler Fund Defaulters Using National IDs To Recover Unpaid Sh12 Billion

    Nowhere To Hide: Govt Begins Tracing Hustler Fund Defaulters Using National IDs To Recover Unpaid Sh12 Billion

    The government has launched a nationwide effort to track down borrowers who have defaulted on Hustler Fund loans, deploying national identification numbers as the primary tool to trace those who owe a combined Sh12 billion, the fund’s chief executive has confirmed.

    Henry Tanui, CEO of the Hustler Fund, told the Special Funds Accounts Committee on Thursday that of the Sh83 billion disbursed since the fund’s inception, Sh71 billion has been repaid and Sh5.3 billion saved. The outstanding Sh12 billion represents the slice that defaulters, many of whom assumed they had slipped through the cracks, will now be compelled to repay.

    “The young people who borrowed and thought they could disappear, they can’t because their IDs are linked to the loans,” Tanui told legislators, making clear that the fund intends to pursue every outstanding account except those belonging to borrowers who have died.

    “We will not behave like shylocks. We will not come to pick up your items if you default.” — Henry Tanui, Hustler Fund CEO

    DATA CLEARANCE SECURED

    Tanui revealed that the fund has obtained approval from the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner to access records tied to approximately 20 million registrants. The authorisation is designed to close the loophole through which defaulters have sought to evade repayment by swapping SIM cards or abandoning mobile numbers.

    He said the integration of ID-linked records would dramatically strengthen monitoring, making it nearly impossible for a borrower to walk away from an obligation simply by changing handsets or phone lines. The fund’s recovery architecture now sits atop what is, in effect, the country’s civil registration backbone.

    Nairobi leads all counties in the number of Hustler Fund borrowers, followed by Kiambu, according to Tanui’s presentation to the committee. The concentration of defaulters in the two counties is likely to define where enforcement attention falls hardest in the months ahead.

    COMMITTEE DEMANDS A PLAN

    The committee, chaired by Migori County Women Representative Fatuma Zainab, heard the recovery briefing with visible impatience, pressing Tanui for a concrete and enforceable plan rather than assurances. Members underlined that the Sh12 billion in outstanding loans is not a private business loss but public money with a paper trail that answers to Parliament.

    “Every shilling from the Hustler Fund must serve its intended purpose. We must protect public resources and ensure initiatives meant to empower citizens function effectively,” Zainab said, signalling that the committee views lax recovery as a governance failure rather than a routine commercial shortfall.

    Legislators welcomed the decision to use national ID linkages and the ODPC clearance as meaningful steps toward tightening oversight, but warned that tightened monitoring will count for little unless it is matched by a schedule of action and measurable milestones for recovery.

    NO COERCIVE TACTICS

    Despite the harder edge of the enforcement language, Tanui was careful to draw a line between tracing and coercion. He told the committee the fund would not resort to asset seizure or the kind of aggressive debt-collection tactics associated with informal lenders.

    “We will not behave like shylocks. We will not come to pick up your items if you default,” he said, emphasising that outreach and sensitisation would precede any punitive steps and that communication with defaulters would be the first instrument of recovery.

    The assurance is likely aimed at a politically sensitive constituency. President William Ruto has repeatedly described the Hustler Fund as the centrepiece of his administration’s bottom-up economic agenda, and its association with coercive debt collection could carry reputational costs for both the fund and the government.

    Defaulters who had assumed the Hustler Fund lacked the institutional architecture to find them now have a clear answer. With national IDs as the anchor and ODPC clearance for 20 million records, the government appears to have built the tracking infrastructure to make that case.

  • ‪Scandal: Audit Reveals Under Age And Unborn Children Benefited From Hustler Fund Loans‬

    ‪Scandal: Audit Reveals Under Age And Unborn Children Benefited From Hustler Fund Loans‬

    An audit of the Hustler Fund loans disbursed in the financial year to June 2024 has revealed serious anomalies in the dates of birth of the beneficiaries amid revelations that some of them were either below the legal cut-off age of 18 or had not been born by the time the cash was disbursed.

    The review by Auditor General Nancy Gathungu revealed that Sh 31,817,085 Hustler Fund loans were dished out to 44,167 borrowers in the year to June 30, 2024, even though the indicated dates of birth of the recipients showed that they were either underage or unborn at the time.

    Auditors found that 253,717 registered customers whose dates of birth ranged between July 1, 2024, and December 2073—way beyond the June 2024 disbursement window—a pointer to possible misrepresentation that led to losses of funds amid concerns of high default rates and the lack of a proper loan management system.

    Out of the ‘unborn’ registered customers, 42,981 had been loaned Sh31.1 million.

    “Review of the customers and opted-in data sets provided revealed customers who were below the required mandatory age of 18 years and others whose birthdates were in the future after June 30, 2024,” the audit notes.

    Auditors also established that 1,377 registered customers of the Hustler Fund were aged between 10 days and 17 years, yet the programme proceeded to loan 1,186 of them some Sh681,395.

    “The records are therefore unreliable and the resultant data in the systems may not have adequate controls. In the circumstances, loan agreements with underage individuals are potentially unenforceable and increase the likelihood of default,” Ms Gathungu observes.

    Of the three payment service providers contracted to extend Hustler Fund loans to Kenyans, Safaricom had the highest record of registered underage and unborn customers, 244,566.

    It was followed by Airtel which had registered 10,128 underage and unborn customers, then Telkom registered 398 of the customers.

    The concerns are coming up even as auditors raise an issue with management of the programme, with the government continuing to rely heavily on the three payment service providers for operations.

    “The Fund is fully dependent on the service providers’ loan management systems resulting to various challenges that may have been avoided if the Fund had its own loan management systems. Further, Management did not have a credit policy and collection strategy for non-performing loans,” the audit notes.

    The observation has been made as a high number of Kenyans who have borrowed from the Hustler Fund default on the loans, casting more doubts on their recoverability.

    By June 2024, the government had provided Sh12.8 billion in funding for the loan programme, of which Sh12.4 billion was to be loaned out to Kenyans.

    Susan Mang’eni, the Principal Secretary of the Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises Ministry last year noted that by September 2024, Kenyans had borrowed Sh57 billion through the programme, of which they had defaulted on Sh11 billion.

  • Government to Deduct Unpaid Hustler Fund Loans from M-Pesa and Airtime Balances

    Government to Deduct Unpaid Hustler Fund Loans from M-Pesa and Airtime Balances

    Defaulters of the hustler fund could soon have their M-Pesa accounts raided and their airtime top-ups deducted in an effort by the government to recover the funds.

    Financial Inclusion Fund acting chief executive officer Elizabeth Nkukuu told MPs that the Fund, commonly known as the Hustler Fund, was exploring several options to recover the funds, including deductions of M-Pesa balances of defaulters.

    Nkukuu, who appeared before the National Assembly’s Special Funds committee, said that the Fund, which has disbursed over Sh13 billion, currently has a default rate of about 78 percent.

    As a result, the acting CEO argued, the Fund is currently considering various alternatives to recover the defaulted amount, which she said could be enforced in the coming months.

    “We are exploring the possibility of recovering the funds from M-Pesa or airtime linked to defaulters. This is still under deliberation as we work towards securing the necessary legal provisions,” she said.

    The committee, however, while questioning the CEO, asked the management of the Fund to submit a comprehensive list of loan defaulters, detailing their names, amounts owed and contact information per constituency.

    This is after the legislators expressed concerns over the authenticity of the reported default figures, underscoring the need for a critical analysis of the evidence.

    Other members of the committee, also questioned the rationale of raiding the M-Pesa accounts of defaulters, with some also questioning ways through which the Fund intends to recover the defaulted funds.

    Nkukuu in response, said the Fund aims to ensure that it recovers all of the Sh7 billion owed by 13 million Kenyans who have defaulted.

    The committee meeting was presided over by chairperson, Fatuma Zainab who is also the Migori County woman representative.

    The committee adjourned the meeting after learning that the Fund was yet to present the required documentation to the office of the Auditor-General.

    Members stressed the importance of resolving the 19 outstanding audit queries. The acting CEO attributed the delays to miscommunication and a shortage of qualified staff within the Fund.

    Lawmakers also questioned the Fund’s ability to manage substantial taxpayer funds without adequate personnel and raised concerns about the Fund’s lack of risk management, questioning whether the funds were insured.

    The acting CEO told the committee that the money was not insured, prompting further deliberation on the need for a risk assessment to safeguard taxpayer funds.

    Zainab asked the Fund’s management to submit detailed reports to the committee within two weeks.