Agriculture credit growth tipped

May 8th at 14:46
08-05-2013 14:46:32+07:00

Agriculture credit growth tipped

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) has predicted that credit growth in the agriculture sector will rise 15 per cent, while in comparison the country's total credit growth is predicted at 12 per cent.

 

The figure was announced by the central bank yesterday during a seminar on banking credit for economic development, held by the Banking Academy.

According to the SBV, in the first three months of 2013 the total outstanding debt facing the entire economy rose 0.67 per cent compared to the last three months of 2012.

Of this figure, outstanding debt for agriculture and rural areas reached nearly VND579 trillion (US$27 billion) or 3.1 per cent up compared to late 2012. It accounted for more than 18 per cent of the entire economy's outstanding debt - not including debt owed to the Bank for Social Policy.

Currently, the outstanding debt for the seafood industry stands at 34.5 trillion ($1.6 billion), a 1 per cent decline from the last quarter of 2012, partly due to an 8 per cent decline in seafood exports. Meanwhile, outstanding debt for the purchasing of machinery and equipment in the farm sector reached VND1.32 trillion ($628 million), or a 16.4 per cent rise compared to late 2012.

As of April 25, the total outstanding debt of the entire economy rose 1.73 per cent

According to deputy director of the Monetary Policy Department at the State Bank, Pham Xuan Hoe, every year the entire banking system had to pay interest on savings at more than VND300 trillion ($14 billion) per year.

Of that figure, VND280 trillion ($13.3 billion) was paid to businesses and individual depositors, while the remainder went to the State Capital Investment Corporation, State Treasury and insurance organisations.

Some economists have calculated that the whole economy now has to pay VND400 trillion ($19 billion) per year in interest for commercial banks, Hoe added.

Lending interest rates

Speaking at the seminar, Nguyen Duc Huong, deputy chairman of LienViet PostBank said that by lowering lending interest rates to rescue ailing businesses, the central bank would face challenges. He noted that if loss-making businesses were rescued by the central bank with a lending rate even as low as zero per cent, they would still not survive, and at the same time depositors would rush to withdraw their money at the banks due to the lower interest. As a result, commercial banks would face the risk of illiquidity, leading to a liquidity race among commercial banks.

Huong conceded that the central bank could lower the lending interest rate at a reasonable ratio to protect depositors instead of trying to rescue loss-making businesses.

Nguyen Duc Trung, an official of the Banking Academy, was in agreement and declared that a consistently high lending rate from 2004-2012 had not hindered businesses from borrowing money. He added that currently a lower lending interest rate would not help raise credit growth.

vietnamnews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Glut of companies struck with Q1 losses

Over 60 listed companies, most of which are brokerage companies and firms operating in the shipping and building material sectors, reported losses during the first...

Investors shun city ferry plan

A plan to develop a ferry system to relieve traffic congestion on HCM City roads was publicised with great fanfare a few years ago, but only one company has...

Power prices held despite coal costs

Despite a rise in the price of coal sold to power plants late last month, the Ministry of Industry and Trade has not been asked to permit an increase in power...

Fruit and vegetable exports drive healthy sector growth

Fruit and vegetable exports this year are expected to increase to US$1 billion from $829 million last year, according to the Fruits and Vegetables Association...

Pardon given to non-complying FIEs

Those foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) that failed to renew their expired investment certificates before July 1, 2011 may be saved from dissolution as the...

Electricity plants face cutbacks in coal imports

Vietnam’s coal-fired power plants are bracing for tightened exports from Indonesia, the world’s top exporter of coal used by thermal power plants.

Weighing loss against gain is vital

Vietnam has agreed to give giant foreign investors, especially those in the electronic and industrial manufacturing sectors, preferential incentives for their...

Businesses got bankrupted; businessmen turn into hired workers, gardeners

A lot bosses have become hired workers in the economic crisis, many businessmen have become penniless, and many millionaires have returned to their home villages to...

Viettel gets nod to provide cable TV services

The military-run mobile service operator Viettel has reportedly been licensed to provide cable television services and plans to start the business in the last...

Vinacomin moves to decrease coal export tax

The Viet Nam National Coal and Mineral Industries Group (Vinacomin) is seeking approval to lower the export tax on coal, claiming the mining industry faces...


MOST READ


Back To Top