FBCCI welcomes lending rate cut, awaits simple interest rates
Bangladesh Bank suggested that the much-expected single-digit lending rate would actually be materialized after a protracted bargaining between the banking sector and the government
The Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI) on Tuesday welcomed the central bank’s move to set a maximum 9 percent interest rate on all loan products except credit cards.
The new rates will come into effect from April 1.
“This is a relief by the finance ministry and the Bangladesh Bank for entrepreneurs. We have long been advocating to lessen cost of doing businesses in our country. We welcome the move,” FBCCI President Sheikh Fazle Fahim said in a statement on Tuesday.
“We are encouraged that it is one element of ease of doing business in our country, which will help the economy to grow through new investment and expansion,” he said.
“We hope the finance ministry with stakeholders will re-examine overall banking operational models to minimise unproductive expenditures that will lower overhead and diversify access to capital for private sector investors. To encourage consumer spending, b2b and widen formal economy, credit card use should be encouraged with ease and lower cost,” Sheikh Fahim said.
Monday’s notice by the Bangladesh Bank suggested that the much-expected single-digit lending rate would actually be materialized after a protracted bargaining between the banking sector and the government.
According to the Bangladesh Bank’s notice, the borrowers, however, will have to bear an additional two percent in penal interest along with the new rates if they default on their instalment payments.
On December 30, Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal said that banks would have to fix the interest rate on lending at 9 percent from the first day of April as per Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s instruction.
The central bank, however, kept unchanged the interest rate of 7 percent for exporters who take loans before shipping products.
Also from this year, banks will not be allowed to lower the disbursement of funds for the industrial sector below their average credit growth in the last three years. The measures have been imposed amid fear that banks may cut loans to industries because of the new ceiling on the lending rates.
The existing high interest rate on loan products for small, medium and large industries has created a barrier for the expansion of the country’s business and service sector, the central bank notice said.
“The single-digit lending rate will help the country achieve the desired economic growth,” the central bank’s notice added.