The Missing Safety Net: Why Namibia Desperately Needs Debt Counselling Legislation

In the bustling streets of Windhoek and across rural Namibia, thousands of consumers are drowning in debt with nowhere to turn for professional help. While our southern neighbour South Africa has comprehensive debt counselling frameworks that have helped millions of over-indebted consumers, Namibia remains stuck in a regulatory time warp, relying on colonial-era legislation that offers little protection to vulnerable borrowers.

The Stark Reality: A Legislative Vacuum

Since independence in 1990, Namibia has made remarkable strides in many areas, yet consumer debt protection remains anchored in the past. Our primary consumer credit laws—the Usury Act of 1968 and the Credit Agreements Act of 1980—were inherited from South Africa's apartheid-era legislation. These outdated laws contain virtually no provisions for debt counselling, leaving Namibian consumers without the professional debt relief mechanisms that have become standard practice globally.

This legislative vacuum is particularly troubling given Namibia's economic challenges. With unemployment rates persistently high and cost of living pressures mounting, many Namibians find themselves trapped in cycles of over-indebtedness. Without regulated debt counselling services, these consumers have few options beyond informal arrangements with creditors or, in worst cases, asset repossession and legal action.

What Debt Counselling Could Offer Namibians

Debt counselling, when properly regulated, provides a lifeline for over-indebted consumers. The process typically involves:

Professional Assessment: Trained debt counsellors evaluate a consumer's financial situation, distinguishing between temporary cash flow problems and genuine over-indebtedness that requires intervention.

Negotiated Relief: Counsellors work with creditors to restructure payment terms, reduce interest rates, or consolidate debts into manageable monthly payments that align with the consumer's actual income.

Legal Protection: During the counselling process, consumers receive protection from legal action by creditors, preventing hasty repossessions and giving families breathing room to stabilize their finances.

Financial Education: Beyond immediate relief, debt counselling includes financial literacy training to help consumers avoid future debt traps.

Learning from South Africa's Success

South Africa's National Credit Act, implemented in 2007, demonstrates what comprehensive debt counselling legislation can achieve. The Act established:

  • Professional Standards: Debt counsellors must be registered with the National Credit Regulator and meet specific qualification requirements
  • Fee Regulation: Counselling fees are strictly regulated to prevent exploitation of vulnerable consumers
  • Legal Framework: Clear procedures for debt review applications and creditor negotiations
  • Consumer Protection: Strong safeguards against predatory lending and abusive debt collection practices

The results speak for themselves. Since 2007, hundreds of thousands of South African consumers have successfully navigated debt review processes, with many emerging debt-free and financially rehabilitated.

The Cost of Inaction

Namibia's failure to modernise debt counselling legislation carries significant economic and social costs:

Individual Impact: Families lose homes and assets that could have been saved through proper debt restructuring. The absence of professional debt counselling often leads to informal "loan sharks" filling the void, creating even more exploitative lending relationships.

Economic Efficiency: Without proper debt resolution mechanisms, the economy suffers from reduced consumer spending power and higher rates of bad debt that ultimately increase borrowing costs for everyone.

Social Stability: Over-indebtedness contributes to family breakdown, mental health challenges, and social unrest—problems that effective debt counselling can help mitigate.

A Glimmer of Hope: The Consumer Credit Bill

The Namibian Financial Institutions Supervisory Authority (NAMFISA) has been developing a comprehensive Consumer Credit Bill that promises to revolutionize consumer protection in Namibia. This bill represents the most significant reform of consumer credit legislation since independence and may finally introduce proper debt counselling frameworks.

The proposed legislation aims to repeal the outdated Usury Act and Credit Agreements Act, replacing them with modern consumer protection mechanisms. While the full details of debt counselling provisions remain to be seen, the bill's emphasis on "fair and transparent rules within the consumer credit market" suggests that debt counselling could finally receive the attention it deserves.

What Namibians Deserve

As the Consumer Credit Bill moves through the legislative process, policymakers must ensure that debt counselling receives comprehensive treatment. Namibian consumers deserve:

Professional Standards: A regulated profession with proper training requirements and ethical guidelines Accessible Services: Affordable debt counselling available in both urban and rural areas Legal Protection: Clear procedures that protect consumers from creditor harassment during debt review Cultural Sensitivity: Services that understand Namibia's unique economic and cultural context

The Path Forward

The introduction of proper debt counselling legislation won't solve Namibia's economic challenges overnight, but it would provide crucial consumer protection infrastructure for the future. As we await the Consumer Credit Bill's passage, civil society organizations, consumer advocacy groups, and financial institutions should collaborate to raise awareness about the importance of debt counselling.

Financial literacy programs should be expanded to help consumers understand their rights and options. Legal aid organizations should prepare to support consumers navigating new debt counselling procedures. And the banking sector should view debt counselling not as a threat to profitability, but as a tool for creating sustainable lending relationships.

Conclusion: No More Waiting

For too long, Namibian consumers have been left to face debt crises alone, armed only with colonial-era laws that offer little protection in today's complex financial landscape. The time for half-measures and delays has passed.

As our legislators consider the Consumer Credit Bill, they hold the power to transform the lives of countless Namibian families. Comprehensive debt counselling legislation isn't just about financial regulation—it's about human dignity, economic justice, and building a more equitable society where temporary financial setbacks don't become permanent life sentences.

The question isn't whether Namibia can afford to implement proper debt counselling legislation. The question is whether we can afford not to.

The author advocates for comprehensive consumer protection reforms and writes on financial inclusion issues in Southern Africa.

How Namibia’s Laws Have Changed to Protect You from Bad Credit Deals (1990–2025)

Why Should You Care?

If you’ve ever taken a loan, bought a car on instalment, or borrowed money from a micro-lender, you’ve been affected by consumer credit laws. These laws are designed to make sure lenders don’t rip you off—and Namibia’s have come a long way since independence.

Here’s a breakdown of how consumer credit protection in Namibia has evolved, what it means for you, and what’s coming next.


The Old Rules We Inherited

Before Independence (Pre-1990):

Namibia used laws from South Africa. Back then, we were under South African rule, and they applied their laws in South West Africa (what Namibia was called before independence).

Two main laws controlled consumer credit (i.e., loans and borrowing):

  1. Usury Act of 1968

    • What it did: Set limits on how much interest lenders could charge.

    • Why it mattered: It stopped lenders from charging ridiculously high rates.

    • Still used after independence? Yes.

  2. Credit Agreements Act of 1980

    • What it did: Controlled how credit agreements (like buying things on hire purchase) should work.

    • Still used after independence? Yes, for decades.

These laws were never really designed for Namibia’s unique financial situation, but we used them anyway for more than 30 years after 1990.


Namibia Starts Making Its Own Laws

2018 – The Microlending Act

  • Why it’s important: This was Namibia’s first homegrown law for small loans, especially those given by microlenders (think cash loans and short-term lending).

  • What it aimed to fix: Some micro-lenders were operating without clear rules, and people were getting stuck in cycles of debt.


Who’s Watching the Lenders?

NAMFISA – Namibia Financial Institutions Supervisory Authority

  • What they do: They’re like the watchdog of the financial sector.

  • Why they matter: They make sure banks, insurers, microlenders, and now even debt collectors follow the rules.

  • Main goal: Protect you, the consumer.


Big Changes Happening Now (2020–2025)

2020 – Consumer Credit Policy

  • What’s that? A policy that identifies problems in the old laws and sets the direction for new ones.

  • What it looks at: How to fill the gaps, regulate lenders better, and protect borrowers.


2023–2025 – Drafting the New Consumer Credit Bill

This is the most important change coming soon. It’s still being finalized after public consultations.


The new Consumer Credit Bill plans to:

  • Replace the old laws (Usury Act 1968, Credit Agreements Act 1980, Microlending Act 2018).

  • Regulate debt collectors for the first time in Namibia.

  • Create fair rules so borrowers understand the real cost of loans.

  • Introduce debt counselling to help people who are overwhelmed by debt.


What Is “Debt Counselling”?

It’s when trained professionals help you manage your debt. They can:

  • Negotiate better repayment terms with lenders

  • Help you avoid losing your assets

  • Offer financial advice


Timeline of Namibia’s Credit Law Journey

Year

Key Event

1990

Independence – inherited credit laws from South Africa

2018

Microlending Act introduced to control small loan lenders

2020

Government starts writing a full Consumer Credit Policy

2023–2025

Drafting and consultation for the Consumer Credit Bill


What Does This All Mean for You?

If you’re a young adult in Namibia trying to borrow money, buy a car, or use credit in any way, the new laws aim to:

  • Protect you from predatory lenders

  • Ensure you understand your credit terms

  • Give you support if you’re drowning in debt

The Consumer Credit Bill, once passed, will be a major step toward a fairer financial system in Namibia. It’s about time we moved on from laws made for another country over 50 years ago.

Let’s Talk:

Have you ever had a bad experience with a lender or been confused by loan terms? Share your story in the comments, or message me—we’re all learning how to navigate Namibia’s financial system better.

The Missing Safety Net: Why Namibia Desperately Needs Debt Counselling Legislation

In the bustling streets of Windhoek and across rural Namibia, thousands of consumers are drowning in debt with nowhere to turn for professio...