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KUSCCO and the Failure of Cooperative Finance: What Went Wrong and What Must Change

Ryan Macharia by Ryan Macharia
April 17, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

The collapse of the Kenya Union of Savings and Credit Co-operatives (KUSCCO) is often framed as a story of fraud and mismanagement. While these elements are undeniable, they are only part of a deeper and more consequential reality. KUSCCO’s failure is not merely institutional, it is systemic, exposing structural weaknesses in the design and regulation of Kenya’s cooperative financial sector.

 

A forensic audit revealed losses exceeding Kshs 12.0 bn, driven by unauthorized transactions, falsified records, and widespread governance failures. These irregularities were not isolated incidents but reflected a breakdown of internal controls and oversight mechanisms. The dismissal of the board and the subsequent insolvency crisis, with liabilities exceeding assets by over Kshs 12.0 bn, underscore the scale of the failure.

 

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Yet focusing solely on governance risks missing the central issue. KUSCCO occupied a unique and largely unregulated space within Kenya’s financial system. As an apex body, it mobilized funds from SACCOs, provided liquidity support, and operated investment schemes. In practice, it functioned like a financial intermediary, effectively a bank, but without being subject to the same prudential standards governing capital adequacy, liquidity, and risk management.

 

This regulatory gap proved critical. While SACCOs themselves are supervised by the Sacco Societies Regulatory Authority, KUSCCO operated in a grey zone, where oversight was fragmented and insufficient. The result was a build-up of systemic risk outside the formal financial safety net. When the institution faltered, the impact cascaded across the sector, forcing SACCOs to write down billions in member deposits and, in some cases, reduce dividends to absorb losses.

 

The crisis also highlights a fundamental design flaw in cooperative finance. By centralizing funds in an apex institution without robust safeguards, the system created a single point of failure. Rather than diversifying risk, it concentrated it.

 

The policy implications are clear. First, regulatory boundaries must be redefined. Any institution performing bank-like functions, regardless of its legal structure, should be subject to equivalent prudential oversight. Second, transparency and governance standards must be strengthened, including real-time reporting and independent audits. Third, risk concentration must be addressed by limiting the exposure of individual SACCOs to centralized entities.

 

Ultimately, the KUSCCO crisis is a warning. Financial stability is not determined by labels such as “cooperative” or “bank,” but by the nature of activities undertaken and the risks assumed. The lesson is straightforward that, where there is intermediation, there must be regulation. Without it, systemic risk does not disappear, it simply accumulates out of sight until failure makes it visible.

 

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