CREDIT MANAGEMENT AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE OF COMMERCIAL BANKS IN UGANDA
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Abstract
This study examined the relationship between credit management and financial performance of banks in Uganda. The research used secondary data based on banks audited financial statements and Bank of Uganda annual supervision reports for the period under analysis 2012-2017.Universal sampling technique was used as the research was conducted on all 24 commercial banks licensed and operational in Uganda. In analyzing the research hypotheses, the study adopted the use of both descriptive and inferential statistics specifically using regression and ANOVA to establish the significance / fitness of the model and also to establish the link between credit management and financial performance of commercial banks in Uganda.The results indicate that there is a negative relationship between credit management as measured by LR, CAR and NPL/TL ratio with financial performance measured by ROE. This indicates that banks in Uganda can increase their financial performance by reducing their non-perfarming loans which is heavily correlated to financial performance i.e. increasing the quality of their credit standards.The findings reveal that all indicators used in credit management explain up to 41% of variation of the financial performances of banks in Uganda. This suggests that other factors apart from the credit policy, capital adequacy and credit risk control affect the financial performance of Banks in Uganda.