Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 04 December 2025
📘 Source: Daily Dispatch

The National Debt Counselling Association (NDCA) has proposed that the government must enhance standards in the sector and prevent unregistered or unethical practitioners from posing as legitimate debt counsellors. The proposal was recently submitted to the department of trade, industry and competition, the National Credit Regulator and other debt-counselling industry players The NDCA said it hopes some of the recommendations will be included in amendments to the National Credit Act and its regulations. René Moonsamy, head of the NDCA, said the proposal — which aims to align the sector with the rest of the financial services industry — will be based on existing regulations in the National Credit Act, but enhanced by provisions of the Conduct of Financial Institutions (COFI) Bill, and the Treating Customers Fairly (TCF) principles.

The National Financial Ombud Scheme (NFO) found in recent years that matters reported to the Credit Ombud “were due to some fault, inaction or misconduct on the part of the debt counsellor”. According to the NFO, in some cases debt counsellors do not take timeous action in: Once the credit providers lawfully terminate, it remains extremely difficult for the consumer to pursue the matter further. Too many consumers have lost property or money because they simply did not know that free assistance is available to them once they encounter problems with their debt counsellor or credit providers while under debt counselling The NFO said consumers generally don’t have the funds to instruct attorneys to attend to the defence of the further court actions against them and credit providers often feel that they have been lenient for a considerable time while not receiving full payment on the account.

The body also found there were some cases where credit providers did not adhere to the debt review court order. The NFO believes consumers are not adequately informed and made aware of the pitfalls of the process, “as is evidenced by the number of consumers who claim to have lost money paid over to the debt counsellors or who did not realise that debt counselling is not an absolute bar to legal action and repossession of their property”. It is set to increase awareness campaigns to inform consumers about the services of the Credit Ombud.

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“Too many consumers have lost property or money because they simply did not know that free assistance is available to them once they encounter problems with their debt counsellor or credit providers while under debt counselling,” said the NFO. Moonsamy said debt counsellors held positions of trust, guiding financially vulnerable people towards sustainable debt management. “Arguably the debt-counselling licence is the single most important financial services licence granted in South Africa. This proposal aims to align the debt counselling sector with the rest of the financial services industry,” she said.

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Originally published by Daily Dispatch • December 04, 2025

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