Husnayain Business Review
Vol. 6 No. 1 (2026)

The Effect of Credit Collection Policy on Loan Performance in the Banking Sector in Central region of Uganda

Alex Semusu (Kabale University)
Eton Marus (Muni University)
Kaaya Siraje (Kabale University)
Eliab Byamukama Mpora (Kabale University)



Article Info

Publish Date
05 Apr 2026

Abstract

This study examined the effect of credit collection policy on loan performance in the banking sector of Central Uganda. Despite the presence of formal credit collection frameworks, commercial banks in Uganda continue to experience persistent loan defaults, raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing collection practices in improving loan performance. Anchored in a pragmatic research paradigm, the study adopted a mixed-methods approach. Quantitative data were collected using structured questionnaires administered to selected commercial banks and analyzed through Covariance-Based Structural Equation Modeling (CB-SEM) using Jeffrey’s Amazing Statistical Program (JASP) version 0.19.3.0. Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA) was employed to validate the measurement model. Qualitative data were obtained through key informant interviews and analyzed thematically to complement and explain the quantitative findings. The results revealed that credit collection policy had a negative but statistically non-significant relationship with loan performance (β ≈ −0.04, p > 0.05). While the measurement model demonstrated acceptable construct validity and reliability, the structural model indicated that formal credit collection policies did not significantly influence loan performance outcomes. Qualitative findings provided further insight, showing that collection practices were largely reactive, with recovery efforts typically initiated only after loans became non-performing. In addition, heavy reliance on third-party debt collectors and delayed borrower engagement weakened internal ownership and accountability in the credit recovery process. The study contributes empirical evidence from Uganda’s banking sector by demonstrating that the effectiveness of credit collection policy is determined less by formal policy design and more by proactive implementation and early borrower engagement. By integrating quantitative SEM results with qualitative insights, the study offers a nuanced explanation for the weak linkage between credit collection policies and loan performance, with implications for strengthening credit risk management policies in developing economies.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

hbr

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Economics, Econometrics & Finance

Description

Husnayain Business Review (JHBR) is a peer-reviewed economic journal serving as a forum for Business Economics Scholars concerning to area of Accounting, Banking, Economics, Entrepreneurship, Finance, Human Resources Management, and Management. This open accessed Journal publishes original research ...