Of several
commentaries, thus far, on Menzgold; its embattled investors and the regulatory
bodies, I find none irritating than the claim that the regulatory body tried
halting activities of the now defunct company, but was resisted by
demonstrations by customers- who accused regulators of attempts to discourage
local companies like Menzgold from operating.
On top of
this, these customers already had ignored several warnings issued by the
regulators, barring them from investing with Menzgold. Hence the conclusion:
They (customers) invested out of greed and must suffer the brunt of their
greed.
The sort of
defence as held by various actors of the regulatory bodies, and some of the
larger Ghanaian populace, if not shallow, one can’t tell what it is.
In the first
place, the already taken trajectory of apportioning blame, especially, from the
side of the regulatory authority is a nonstarter. If not a sign of
irresponsibility, what it is?
C’mon! Why
were the regulatory bodies created in the first place, if not to crack down on
activities as fraudulent as allegedly, that of Menzgold, protect the public and
promote investor confidence?
Many of us
might have fallen for the excuse that warnings were issued. In calling a spade
a spade, if it is about issuing warnings, then we don’t need a regulatory body
in the first place. These institutions can’t be sustained with the taxpayer’s
contribution only to warn but bite.
If it’s
about warnings, trust the human intuition to serve best. Though often than not,
we have ignored it leadings because the illusiveness of the better outcomes of
our actions often blind us. Only to venture and suffer the consequences.
Thereafter we are made to face the music for our insanity to reason.
I believe
this describes the current situation of people who invested with Menzgold,
their intuitions might have warned them, but it does happen to all of us at
times.
Obviously,
the case under consideration like many in the past goes beyond the individual
and intuition. It is about states and the protection it guarantees her people.
This is an
establishment which has rode on media and celebrity endorsement to attract the
magnitude of investors it had. Not only this, come to think of the story of its
operations in Spain, the United Kingdom and Switzerland.
This is why
we have the many establishments like the FDA, SEC and the Bank of Ghana in the
name of regulatory bodies. It is not for the luxury of it. The individual can
be fooled, but not the institution. This furthers a call made by President
Obama for strong institutions during his last visit.
For truth
sake, SEC is not a warning issuing body, but one to act. This is why it has
been filled with men to steer its operations.
Per the
body’s website, SEC is established by the Securities Industry Act, 2016 (Act
929) (‘the Act’) with the objective to regulate and promote the growth and
development of an efficient, fair and transparent securities market in which
investors and the integrity of the market are protected. Such an involving
mandate can’t be achieved with mere warnings, it can’t bite.
This is why
the body must accept blame for the operations of Menzgold, if they were not
partners as I’m thinking. As funny as it might sound, the systematic nature of
such occurrences recently gives a reason for one to think for a case of create,
loot and share.
I don’t
think the country so soon has forgotten about DKM and God is love…
Okay, let’s
assume without admitting the warnings were enough. Then delicate institutions like the Food and
Drugs Authority should also go on a warning spree without action. I wonder what
might remain of us as a country.
Then and
there, I think we shall rethink our position of blaming the ordinary Ghanaian
for investing with entities like DKM and now Menzgold. I mean, which “sane”
fellow with little knowledge about risk assessment with respect to investment
would forgo a 15% interest for a 1%?
In the
scenario of the FDA I am trying to make, we can’t blame the sick for accessing
an unauthorised drug, which has made its way into the market, when that person
has not what it takes it detect. Same could be said of victims of the Menzgold
scam.
It is time
enough we admit ours is a weak system which is gliding towards “doom”. I don’t
need a cross-over watch night service to foretell this.
Unless the
system as weak as it appears is a creation of the big men in suits and ties for
their individual benefit, then SEC should admit blame for failing in its
mandate to protect the investor.
We should
not be mean. Blaming the disgruntled Menzgold investor is adding insult to
their injury. If we can’t empathize with them, there’s no need adding to their
misery.
Thanks for sharing this blog with us.
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