Large defaulted loans have distressed domestic economy: Experts
UNB :
Bangladesh Bank (BB) has arranged and published different types of loan defaulted data together as per the IMF’s prescription, which economists have termed as a real picture of the distressed domestic economy.
Eminent economists told UNB that the report disclosed the real condition of the country’s banking sector, and it will help investors and depositors make their future decisions.
According to the BB’s Financial Stability Report-2022, published on Sunday, banking sector’s total risky loans amounted to Tk 3.78 lakh crore last year.
The amount has been revealed by calculating the total non-performing loans (NPL), outstanding rescheduled loans and outstanding restructured written-off loans.
At the end of 2022, the banking sector’s NPL stood at Tk 120,649 crore, outstanding rescheduled loans Tk 212,780 crore and outstanding written-off loans Tk 44,493 crore.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) termed all these loans as none performing loans.
The BB has published the report due to requirement of the global lender as it fulfills the condition of $4.7 billion in loan for Bangladesh.
The IMF has conditioned its loan approval for Bangladesh to bring down the non-performing loans to 10 percent.
The IMF favours rescheduling loans and court-suspended loans as default loans.
Professor Mustafizur Rahman, Distinguished Fellow of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), told UNB that the large amount of none performance is creating overwhelming pressure on the domestic economy as a large portion of money is stuck in unproductive sectors.
New entrepreneurs and small and medium industries are struggling for fund, where banks can invest more money if they got the loan money back on time, he said.
He appreciated the higher recovery rate of agriculture loans, where farmers are very concerned to repay their loan money after harvesting the crops, and they do not argue or search way to be defaulters.
Ahsan H. Mansoor, Executive Director of research organisation Policy Research Institute (PRI) and former economist of the IMF told UNB: “Rescheduled loans are also defaulted loans as the IMF said so.”
If taken as rescheduled loans, the rate of the defaulted loans in the banking sector will stand at 25 percent while the IMF has advised to keep such loan at 10 percent.
