Abstract:
The Savings and Credit Cooperative Societies (SACCOS) are financial co-operatives that aim at
meeting the financial needs of all members men/women, old/young, rich/poor in particular, by
encouraging savings and granting loans to the members. It belongs to its members who manage it
democratically. They play important role in socio-economic development of members and
communities in general as SACCOS enable easy access to financial services to people,
encourage savings, create employment opportunities, support directly community development
effort like helping community access to social services, stimulate growth of business, and
improve members’ income as well as living conditions. If SACCOs are managed properly, it
becomes possible to play such social and economic roles to the members and have spiral effects
to the community development process. As a result, they will be able to achieve the social and
economic expectations of members. However for some SACCOS as they proceed with their
operations, they face various obstacles which prevent them from fulfilling the
visions/expectations that people (members) and community at large.
Therefore the aim of this paper was to analyse the internal and external factors that hinder
SACCOS to achieve the expectations of their members. The descriptive design was used and the
data used were mostly secondary being collected from various already documented reports,
papers, researches and journals, and in some circumstances, primary data were used. The
approach used in describing the findings was mostly qualitative. The paper revealed that the
factors preventing SACCOS to meet members’ expectations are both internal and external.
Internal factors are like; financial constraints, poor loan recovery, governance problems, lack of
common interests, high interest rates on loans by some SACCOS, weak leadership and
institutional capacity, uninformed membership, inadequate education and training, limited range
of financial products and poor quality services, poor accounting and record keeping, misuse of
funds and non adherence to co-operative principles. The internal factors identified include;
competition, negative impacts of external financing, weak assistance form SACCOS supporting
institutions, insufficient auditing and inspection, political interference and excessive donor
dependency. It was recommended that to overcome these challenges and meet members’
expectations, there is a need to; promote SACCOS good governance practices, provide education
and training, diversifying sources, increasing capacity and number of co-operative banks, ensure
proper financial management and better accounting practices, keeping records properly and
networking of the SACCOS