Invest more in people to fight future woes

Invest more in people to fight future woes

World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim was in Bangladesh from June 30 on a three-day visit. During his visit he talked to The Daily Star’s Diplomatic Correspondent Rezaul Karimexclusively on a wide range of issues, including Bangladesh’s need to prepare for the economy of tomorrow, improve business environment, invest more in human capital and think seriously about automation in shaping the path of economic development. He also touched upon the WB’s development assistance, the ongoing Rohingya crisis, its grants to support the Rohingyas and the host community, multilateralism and trade war. Following are excerpts from the interview.

 

Question: Amid the trade war between the US and other countries, how do you see the future of multilateralism? What impact would it have on the global economy and global order? Will the World Bank play any role to protect the multilateral system?

Answer: Let me take the multilateral system first. The post-World War II, the world order has had a tremendous record. If you remember before 1944, there were wars between countries and Europe. There were world wars breaking out. So, while there were conflicts around the world, the post-1945 world order focused on bringing the multilateralism to a new level in order to help solve the most difficult global problems.

I think it has been a great success. There are many examples of when the multilateral system came together and solved problems in a country — the country negotiating by itself couldn’t have solved those problems. What I say is, if you take the multilateral system apart, you will very quickly learn that you would have to reinvent it.

There are deep flaws in the multilateral system and we all know that. But it’s part of how you run an organisation, like mine, that has 189 governors – there are 189 member countries who are my bosses. So, the very act of making something happen with 189 bosses is an art in itself. But it is what makes us strong and great. It is what led to the recent capital increase and going to help us have a positive effect.

In terms of the trade war, there’s not really of trade war yet. There is a lot of threats of tariffs. We, at the World Bank Group, based on history and evidence, believe very strongly in free and open trade. And the reason we believe in it so strongly is not ideological; it’s based on evidence on what happens to poor countries when they engage in trade. When poor countries engage in trade, many good things happen.

Among them, skills level improves, especially if poor countries improve their business environment and have foreign direct investment. Foreign direct investment actually improves institutions in poor countries. And getting involved in trade helps grow the GDP, but there is also very strong evidence that getting more involved in trade helps the bottom 20 percent in developing countries.

There is really no way that we can envision the end of extreme poverty, which is our number one goal, or boosting shared prosperity, without more trade. So, we support fully the WTO. We’ve been helping put the WTO frameworks in place. And, we believe very, very strongly that from the perspective of poor countries and poor people, trade is extremely important.

If you, for example, envision the trade war, and all the countries ride up to the limit of WTO rules in terms of applying tariffs, the overall global economy would shrink by 9 percent. That’s just if we go to the WTO limit. But if they go beyond the WTO limit, we don’t know. Trade wars, again based not on ideology, but on evidence, could have a terrible negative effect on our clients – the developing countries.

Q: Bangladesh faces a new reality because it is becoming a lower middle-income country and shaking off the LDC status. What kind of development strategy should Bangladesh follow in the face of future challenges?

A: We admire tremendously what Bangladesh has accomplished. They have cut in half the rate of extreme poverty very quickly. So, there’ve been great lessons. We are in the process of creating something that we are calling the human capital index, which ranks countries from 1 to 180 or so based on their quality of investment in human capital.  Bangladesh is going to end up doing very well for the GDP per capita. In other words, for a poor country, they have done relatively well.

But also, Bangladesh is a developing country, and as outlined in the seventh five-year plan, Bangladesh is very well aware of the areas where it has to make progress. So, the things that I’m pointing out are not things that Bangladesh does not understand itself; it’s all in the seventh five-year plan.

But, some of the things I want to point out that we are going to be helping Bangladesh with. They need to improve the business environment. India went up 30 places in the doing business index and it is because Prime Minister Modi asked us specifically to help them improve their business environment. It is already having a positive impact on the perception of businesses in the outside world – outside India. Bangladesh has some work to do in the business environment. But again, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has stated that she wants to do this… we are very happy to work with her on it. Again, it is something that Bangladesh is already aware of and we are happy to help.

Childhood stunting rate, or malnutrition at under 5, is higher than it should be, and it is a little bit surprising because Bangladesh does so well in other areas of health. So, improving the provision of health and education is something that is, again, priority for the Bangladeshi government and something we can look at.

But, let me then take the question of past economic growth. One of the great drivers of growth has been, for example, the garments industry.

There has been a recent Wall Street journal article about the use of robots in Bangladeshi garment factories and this is very interesting.  There’s at least one company, and I think there are more, that brought something you call a sewbot… and they brought it from Germany. And it is beginning to replace the human hands in doing the work of the garment industry. Now, my guess is that in Bangladesh, the workers in the garment industry are so skilled, the labour-intensive garment factories will still be relevant for a while, but ultimately, I think it is likely that the robots will take over.

In Bangladesh, that industry is still very productive. But when I talk to African countries, many African countries are saying the Bangladeshi garment industry will come to Africa very soon. What I am telling them now is don’t count on it. I have still not seen a single African garment factory that can reach higher than 65 percent of Bangladeshi efficiency.

I met experts from Bangladesh, all over Africa, who are helping these African garment factories. But right now, the only way these African garment factories stay in business is because there is the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which gives special access to the US market for African garment factories. It is the only way they stay competitive.

So, while I think the garment industry will persist in Bangladesh for a while, Bangladesh has to start thinking about disruptive technology and how it is going to impact jobs. And, this is not unique to Bangladesh. In fact, every country in the world has to rethink what the drivers of economic growth would be. There are some countries where there are many different potential drivers of economic growth. China is one example where their companies like Alibaba and Tencent have given much better access to capital and markets for many small and medium enterprises. There are also factories in Shenzhen, in China, that are completely automated and they are more automated, more run on artificial intelligence than any other region.

In the United States, innovation is so strong, and if that continues to drive the economy, then even in the US, they are asking the question: what will the low-skilled workers do? Will they be retrained to be computer programmers? Probably no. So, in many developed countries, they are talking about universal basic income, just assuming that many people won’t have work to do, so just give them a basic income.

So, there’s no specific prediction that I have for Bangladesh. My only recommendation is that like every other country in the world, Bangladesh has to start thinking very seriously now about how automation, innovation, artificial intelligence will affect the drivers of growth today. And, what does Bangladesh need to do to prepare for the economy of tomorrow? There are many different possibilities. We don’t know what that would look like. Anybody who would tell you what the economy of tomorrow will look like… you shouldn’t believe it. Nobody really knows, but you’ve got to start preparing now.

Investing more and more effectively in your people is one strategy that will be useful, no matter what. If you invest in reducing your childhood stunting rates, if you invest in early childhood education, if you invest in better outcomes in primary, secondary and tertiary education, if you invest more in basic healthcare… those are the things which will be useful to you, no matter what. Bangladesh has a great record in improving health and education. But there is more to do.

We are desperately, desperately looking all over the world to try help our clients understand what disruptive technology would do in terms of shaping the path of economic development. And the only answer that we can give them is start doing your own research, start exposing yourself to technology, think right now about the different directions that the economy can take.

Q: You have met Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the finance minister. What is the outcome and what is your observation about Bangladesh?

A: We have a saying in the US, put your money where your mouth is. And we’ve done that this year. I have been saying for a long time that Bangladesh’s achievements in development are remarkable. This year we did a total of $3.05 billion of lending to Bangladesh, which is a record for us. And for the countries that receive funding from the IDA, it is the second largest amount in the world.

So, we spoke about many things, especially about the Rohingyas. We came to see the next steps in exactly the same way. We agreed that the first and the most important issue is to make sure that the Rohingyas are able to return, this is what they want, they want to return to their land of forefathers. They want to return to the land where their fathers, mothers and grandparents are buried. So, we completely agree that it is the first responsibility, the first priority. We should not take our eyes off that priority. We also agreed that there’s more that we can do to support the Rohingyas while they are here. We just can’t support the Rohingyas, we also have to support the host community.

So, we were in very strong agreement that our programmes should also support the people in Cox’s Bazar who have literally opened their land and their homes to the Rohingyas. We also agreed that there’s more and better ways for us to support the Rohingyas. You will be hearing about this over the next 6 months or so. We are thinking about how we can use the $480 million grant. How can we use that more effectively? We came out in very strong agreement about all those issues. Of course, we talked about the lending programme. The prime minister was very pleased that we had such a robust lending portfolio for Bangladesh this year.

Exports miss target for second year

Exports miss target for second year

Refayet Ullah Mirdha

Exports fell short of target for the second consecutive year in fiscal 2017-18, in what can be viewed as a worrying development for the government.

Last fiscal year, exports fetched $36.66 billion, up 5.81 percent from a year earlier, but fell short of the government’s target of $37.5 billion, thanks in part to below-par performance in June.

Export receipts in June were 18.87 percent below the monthly target at $2.93 billion. They were 3.08 percent lower than the previous fiscal year.

There was a ray of hope though: Bangladesh’s main export earner, apparel, fared better than in the previous year, which saw the lowest growth in 15 years.

Garment shipments brought home $30.61 billion, up 8.76 percent year-on-year, according to data from the Export Promotion Bureau. It also beat the target of $30.16 billion.

The comeback was possible because of a favourable global business environment and higher productivity in our factories, said Siddiqur Rahman, president of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA).

“We have overcome the image crisis as remediation work is near completion. International retailers have regained their confidence in us.”

Rising garment shipments to new and emerging Asian markets such as India, China and Japan have also contributed to the higher earnings.

The BGMEA president is optimistic about the exports potential in the new fiscal year, which began on July 1.

“We are expecting even better performance in the current year as the economies in the major countries are rebounding. Bangladesh will outperform its competitors as business outlook is better now compared to the just concluded last year,” he added.

Apart from apparel, only two product categories were able to cross the $1-billion mark last fiscal year.

One of them is leather and leather goods, which earned $1.08 billion, down 12.03 percent year-on-year. The earnings were also 21.34 percent below the annual target of $1.38 billion.

Leather and leather goods have been bringing in more than $1 billion for the last five years on the back of higher shipments of quality products to the EU, the US and Japan. It declined in fiscal 2017-18 as most of the tanneries that shifted to the Savar leather estate from the city’s Hazaribagh area are yet to become fully operational, tanners said.

After a gap of three years, jute and jute goods again crossed the $1-billion mark in exports earnings as the demand for the natural fibre is increasing globally.

Jute and jute goods exports grew 6.56 percent to $1.02 billion. The sector, however, fell short of the target of $1.05 billion.

Exports of home textiles were up 9.95 percent to $878.68 million, agricultural products 21.79 percent to $673.70 million, and pharmaceuticals 16.03 percent to $103.46 million.

Bicycle exports grew 3.97 percent to $85.73 million, ceramics 32.70 percent to $51.94 million, and furniture 20.27 percent to $63.18 million.

On the other hand, frozen and live fish exports declined 3.42 percent to $508.43 million, plastic goods 15.79 percent to $98.48 million, rubber 9.21 percent to $25.84 million, and terry towel 4.4 percent to $42.35 million.

Foreign aid in pipeline: $44b

Foreign aid in pipeline: $44b

Rejaul Karim Byron

Unused foreign aid has reached a new high of $44.51 billion despite a record disbursement of development assistance in the last fiscal year, data from the Economic Relations Division showed.

The ERD officials said the amount of the unused foreign aid piled up thanks to the commitment of a huge amount of funds as well as slow pace of implementation of projects affected by faulty design, lengthy approval process and complexity in land acquisition.

According to the ERD data, the foreign aid in the pipeline was $35.75 billion on June 30, 2017 and rose 24.50 percent to $44.51 billion a year later. ERD Secretary Kazi Shofiqul Azam told The Daily Star, “Foreign aid has to be in the pipeline. Otherwise how can we spend it?”

The ministries and divisions could utilise a record amount of foreign aid of $6.1 billion in the just concluded fiscal year. The government has targeted to disburse $7.5 billion in 2018-19.

“It is not possible to expedite the utilisation of foreign aid beyond this,” Azam said.

According to the ERD data, the government utilised $3 billion to $3.6 billion in foreign aid per year in the four years from 2012-13 to 2016-17.

Aid utilisation almost doubled in the last fiscal year from $3.56 billion in 2016-17.Azam said the government has received billions of dollars in aid commitments from Russia, China and India, which significantly raised the amount of external funds in the pipeline.

Russia committed $11.38 billion for the Rooppur nuclear power plant project. Of the funds, $1 billion was spent in 2017-18 and the rest will be spent by 2023-24, the year when the plant is supposed to be fully implemented.

Before 2009-10, Bangladesh used to receive aid commitment of $1 billion to $2 billion every year. It jumped up to $5 billion from 2009-10. The government received the highest $7 billion aid commitment until 2015-16.

The record broke in 2016-17 when the commitment made reached $17.96 billion, which included the fund for the Rooppur nuclear power plant project.

In the last fiscal year, the country received a commitment of $14.86 billion, with China and India accounting for $4.35 billion and $4.5 billion respectively.

In practice, when a loan agreement is signed with a development partner it is considered commitment, meaning the fund is ready for utilisation and the unused portion of a fund is added to the pipeline.

For instance, during his visit to Bangladesh in 2016 Chinese President Xi Jinping promised $21.5 billion in soft loans for the country. But, since no loan agreement was signed at the time, the sum did not enter the log for foreign aid commitment made during the year.

The loan agreements for five projects involving $4.35 billion were struck with the Chinese Exim Bank in 2017-18. The bank has already disbursed about $1 billion, ERD officials said.

Since 2010, India also committed $7.5 billion under three lines of credit. But only $607 million has been used so far.

The reason for the low utilisation includes complexities in the projects rather than the neighbouring country dragging its feet in parting with the amount, said an ERD official.

Much time is consumed in the approval process in both countries, he said.

Japan, World Bank, and Asian Development Bank have also committed huge amount of funds in recent years.

Japan committed billions of dollars for mega such as the Dhaka Metro Rail project and the Matarbari coal-fired power plant, but their implementation came almost to a halt after seven Japanese nationals were killed in the 2016 Holey Artisan Bakery attack. The deceased Japanese nationals included experts for the metro rail project.

However, the ERD official said the implementation expedited from last fiscal year. According to the ERD’s “Flow of external resource into Bangladesh” report published last year, the sluggish implementation of project results in slow disbursement of aid, leading to time and cost overruns.

The report said projects are often designed without proper planning or feasibility studies and people engaged in project preparation are not properly trained.

Delay in approval of awarding contracts, appointing consultants, releasing funds as well as the lack of coordination among financiers in case of multi-donor funded projects were found to be the causes for the slow disbursement, according to the ERD report.

Project cost rises as size expands

Project cost rises as size expands

Rejaul Karim Byron

The government is on its way to doubling the size of a planned permanent exhibition centre in Purbachal new town to hold the annual Dhaka International Trade Fair, thereby increasing the project cost by about 64 percent, despite a scarcity of land in the country.

The planning ministry is going to place the revised project titled China-Bangladesh exhibition centre before the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (Ecnec) today.

In it, the amount of land required is estimated to be 35 acres. Initially, it was 20 acres.

When the project was approved, the estimated cost was Tk 796 crore, of which Tk 626 crore was being provided by the Chinese government as a grant.

Now, the revised cost is Tk 1,303 crore, with the additional Tk 507 crore coming from government resources.

The revised project papers say 38 percent of the expenses have been made while physical progress had reached 23 percent.

The Ecnec had approved the project in August 2015 and it was scheduled to have been completed last month. Now, the completion date has been extended to December 2020.

The Export Promotion Bureau of Bangladesh first took up the initiative in 2009 to present the country’s products to foreign buyers, said a planning ministry official.

The cost was calculated to be Tk 275 crore while the Old Airport area was selected as the venue. The land was found to be unavailable and the sector 4 of Purbachal’s Roopganj side was selected.

On the increase in cost, the planning ministry said the Beijing Institute of Architectural Design has prepared a second design of the project which necessitated the use of more land and new components.

A firm approved by the Chinese government will construct the exhibition centre and hand it over to the Bangladesh government, said a planning ministry official.

The institute’s new design contains 806 booths of nine square metres each in two hall rooms.

There will also be a conference room, press centre, meeting room and business information centre, as well as parking space for 1,500 cars. There will be a maternity corner and crèche on the first floor.

The proposal says the permanent exhibition centre would enable manufacturers and exporters to showcase their products year round while the local companies would get ideas from visiting foreign buyers.

Currently, the trade fair is held at Sher-e-Bangla Nagar near the Bangabandhu International Conference Centre throughout the month of January.

Local companies participate alongside foreign ones from countries, including India, Pakistan, China, Malaysia, Thailand, the US, Singapore, Australia, the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates and Germany.

Golden days beckon for jute

Golden days beckon for jute

Refayet Ullah Mirdha

Jute and jute goods put in a solid shift in the overseas market in fiscal 2017-18, crossing the $1 billion mark in receipts after five years, much to the cheer of the government as it endeavours to lower dependency on garment.

Last fiscal year, the sector brought home $1.02 billion, up 6.56 percent year-on-year, according to data from the Export Promotion Bureau.

Jute and Jute goods is the third sector to crossed the $1 billion-mark in export receipts after apparel and leather and leather goods.

“The international market trend is so far good,” said HM Rezaul Karim, vice-president of the Bangladesh Jute Goods Exporters’ Association.

The sector’s turn of fortune comes as the use of the natural fibre is on the rise worldwide for a growing shift towards an eco-friendly lifestyle.

Besides, the demand for jute sacks is on the rise from African countries like Sudan, Kenya, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Nigeria, Egypt, Cameroon, Tanzania and Uganda, where they are used for food grain packaging.

Karim, whose firm Bico Jute Fibres exports jute and jute goods worth $20 million a year, lamented that exporters do not enjoy any financial incentive from the government, although the local manufacturers are enjoying 7.5 percent cash incentive from the government.

Another important reason for the rise in the sector’s exports is the use of the natural fibre by global car giants like BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, Renault, Mitsubishi, Volvo, Audi, Daimler Chrysler and Ford, said Azazur Rahman, owner of Supreme Fashion and Fibre, which ships 600 tonnes of raw jute a year.

The global car industry needs about 100,000 tonnes of jute a year, of which 12,000 tonnes come from Bangladesh, the exporters said.

Bangladesh has the potential to become the main supplier of jute to the global automobile industry, which uses the natural fibre to manufacture the car interiors.

Previously, the car industry used glass fibre to manufacture the interiors. But glass fibre is not recyclable or biodegradable, so in 1994 the search for a green alternative began. Jute emerged as the frontrunner.

As a result, Bangladesh has the potential to export jute and jute goods worth $5 billion to $7 billion annually in the next seven years.

“We have a big potential also in the European markets as the demand for natural fibre is increasing in the western world,” Rahman said.

Banks’ operating profits soar despite challenges

Banks’ operating profits soar despite challenges

Most of the private banks registered higher operating profits in the first half of the year in spite of a number of challenges, including liquidity crisis and interest rate hike.

The figure, however, is provisional as the operating profit is a profit from business operations before deduction of provisioning against loans and corporate taxes.

The Daily Star obtained data of 18 banks’ operating profits; 14 posted growth in operating profits ranging from 5 percent to 36 percent.

“This development is of great comfort to the banking sector,” said a high official of the Bangladesh Bank.

The majority of the banks have widened their respective balance sheets, which reflected in the higher operating profit numbers, said Md Arfan Ali, managing director of Bank Asia, whose operating profit surged the most, 36 percent.

Private sector credit growth maintained a satisfactory trend in recent months, which allowed banks to log in a handsome amount of operating profit, he said.

Another reason for the rise in operating profits is the acceleration of implementation of mega infrastructural projects.

“The banks have enjoyed a hefty amount of charges and commissions against the guarantee they offered to contractors,” said Ali.

He said the opening and settlement of letters of credit have registered huge growth in recent months.

“The leap in most banks’ operating profits suggests the sector performed well in the first half of 2018,” said M Kamal Hossain, managing director of Southeast Bank, which logged in 11 percent growth in profit.

But he fears the trend might not continue in the second half because of lower interest spread.

From July 1, banks have started to lower the interest rates to single digits on loans and deposits in line with the decision of the Bangladesh Association of Banks, a forum of bank directors.

Banks will have to bring down the interest rates for lending and deposit to 9 percent and 6 percent respectively, meaning that the interest spread will come down to 3 percent from the 5 percent limit set by the central bank.

“Non-performing loans are increasing, which will also have an adverse impact on the banks’ operating profit,” Hossain added. The rising operating profit is not the true picture of the banking sector, said Syed Mahbubur Rahman, managing director of Dhaka Bank.

The actual profit figures would change significantly after accounting for provisioning and tax, said Rahman, also the chairman of the Association of Bankers, Bangladesh.

Govt mulls Tk 519cr jute textile mill

Govt mulls Tk 519cr jute textile mill

Rejaul Karim Byron

The government is going to set up a specialised jute textile mill at a cost of Tk 519 crore although public sector textile and jute mills are counting losses every year.

The proposal for setting up the factory named Sheikh Hasina Specialised Jute and Textile Mill may be placed at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (Ecnec) today.

The mill is planned to be set up in Jamalpur district’s Madarganj upazila by 2020.

The planning ministry proposal said the mill would earn additional foreign currency producing exportable low-priced garments, including denim trousers, jackets and shirts, using a mix of jute and cotton.

One of the three prerequisites of availing trade preference to the US through the Generalised System of Preferences is use of mixed cotton and environment-friendly manufacturing facilities.

A planning ministry official said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina during a visit to the textiles and jute ministry in 2014 had directed making Bangladesh Jute Mills Corporation (BJMC) profitable by producing multi-pronged jute products. Data shows that the BJMC mills and factories suffered losses of Tk 385 crore to Tk 724 crore in the last six years.

According to a finance ministry provisional estimate, the BJMC loss was Tk 489 crore in the just concluded fiscal year and Tk 481 crore in the previous year.

The BJMC started its journey after the country’s independence with 82 jute mills. Now only 26 remain.

Every year the government gives Tk 500 crore to Tk 1,000 crore in subsidies to the BJMC from the budget.

Bangladesh Textile Mills Corporation (BTMC) has also been counting losses for years. In the just concluded fiscal year, it suffered a loss of Tk 17 crore.

Sources at the BTMC said they have invited various countries, including India, Japan and Turkey, to invest in mills under them.

The government has planned to take up a project worth $350 million or Tk 2,800 crore for balancing, modernising, rehabilitating and expanding the mills, where China would invest about $280 million or Tk 2,240 crore.

Though China has pledged to provide loans, it is yet to sign a loan agreement. The BJMC officials say once the balancing, modernisation, rehabilitation and expansion was completed, many of the age-old state-run jute mills would become more productive.

China Textile Engineering Corporation has already conducted a feasibility study on the jute mills, said an official of the textile and jute ministry.

The study says Bangladesh was losing its leading position in the global jute industry due to a lack of technology, low efficiency, obsolete equipment, single product focus, and a lack of competitiveness.

Remittance rises 17pc

Remittance rises 17pc

Star Business Report

Inward remittance has bounced back strongly in the just concluded fiscal year, thanks to depreciation of the taka against the US dollar.

The country received remittances worth $14.98 billion in 2017-18, up 17.31 percent from the previous year, according to Bangladesh Bank data.

Remittance is a major source of foreign currency for Bangladesh and its descent since fiscal 2015-16 became a matter of concern for the government.

In 2016-17, the receipts were the lowest in six years — $12.77 billion.

The recovery of remittance has come up as a relief for the government when the financial sector is facing an acute shortage of dollar, a Bangladesh Bank official said.

He said the depreciation of the taka against the greenback played a major role to encourage migrants to send home more remittance in the last fiscal year.

On June 30, the interbank exchange rate was Tk 83.75, which was Tk 80.60 a year earlier.

Bangladeshis living abroad are remitting more money through formal channels because of higher rate offered by local banks, the BB official said. The majority of the banks are facing a shortage of greenback for the last few months due to spiralling import payments against falling export earnings.

So, the banks are putting in their best efforts to bump up remittance inflows through their respective channels, the BB official said.

At the same time, the central bank has strengthened its surveillance on hundi, the illegal outlet that many turn to for moving funds cross-border, he said.

“This has also given a boost to the remittance inflows,” the central banker said.

A strong pick-up in global economic activities, especially in the Middle Eastern nations, also helped the country maintain the upward trend, according to him.

Punish loan defaulters: FBCCI

Punish loan defaulters: FBCCI

Star Business Report

The FBCCI yesterday reiterated its demand that the government punish wilful loan defaulters who were putting a great strain on the banking sector.

“The real defaulters should be punished. The justice should be done in a transparent manner,” said Shafiul Islam Mohiuddin, president of the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI).

He was speaking at a press conference in the FBCCI’s office in Dhaka on the recent cut in bank interest rates.

Reitering his views at a June 9 press meet, he said trials of some bad bank borrowers were ongoing while some were facing Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) but the FBCCI would not lobby to save any defaulter.

The FBCCI also suggested that banks continue to fund good borrowers, who defaulted on valid reasons such as sudden huge losses for political instability and a cut in production because of inadequate gas and electricity supply.

“Unfortunately, these good borrowers are also becoming victims along with the wilful defaulters,” the president of the apex trade body said.

Every bank should treat their borrowers according to their previous records, he said. “They should keep in mind that no injustice is done to the good clients.”

In the June 9 press meet, the FBCCI chief also called for exemplary punishment for bank defaulters. “It was no less than a robbery.”

Sometimes some small borrowers—owners of small and medium enterprises—have to go through tough legal processes after failing to repay loans of small amounts, although they are not wilful defaulters, Mohiuddin said.

“Now, every bank defaulter in the country has to face the trial where the political or any other kind of identity of the person does not add any value. It’s a very good culture.”

The banking sector has been going through a tough time in recent months. Banks’ non-performing loans (NPLs) hit Tk 88,589 crore as of March this year, which is 10.78 percent of the total outstanding loans.

The chronic inefficiency and mismanagement in state banks can now been seen in private banks too. Even some first-generation banks are in serious trouble now, including liquidity crisis.

The probes into some of the scams that have plagued BASIC and Farmers banks have not gone well to say the least. Even the High Court called in the ACC investigators of BASIC Bank scams last month and reprimanded them. “We have to cover our faces with black cloth in shame …,” an HC judge said. According to a Bangladesh Bank enquiry, around Tk 4,500 crore was siphoned out of BASIC Bank between 2009 and 2013 when Sheikh Abdul Hye Bacchu chaired the board of the bank.

“The current amount of NPL is a matter of concern for our economy. It helps to increase the interest rate. Whether it is a vicious cycle or not, BB knows it better,” Mohiuddin said in yesterday’s press meet.

“We want that our banking management not fall in any risk. We demanded an independent banking commission so that the actions are taken transparently.”

Banks are supposed to implement the cut in bank interest rates from July 1, he said.  “However, we do not have any record on how many banks have reduced the interest rate to single digit until now although the order to cut the rate came from the prime minister.”

He also suggested that the government form a high-powered taskforce to realise the NPLs for which the bank interest rate rose abnormally. The bank interest rate in Bangladesh is higher compared to some other Asian countries, he said.

For instance, the interest rate in China is 4.3 percent, Singapore 5.3 percent, Vietnam 6.25 percent, Pakistan 8.2 percent, Thailand 7 percent, Nepal 7 percent, Indonesia 4.5 percent and Malaysia 4.8 percent, Mohiuddin said.

The reduced interest rate will encourage businesses to come up with more investment, create more jobs and boost economic development, he said.

Deposit funds in private banks at 6pc interest BB asks state banks

Deposit funds in private banks at 6pc interest

 

BB asks state banks

 Star Business Report

The central bank yesterday asked state-owned banks to deposit their funds in private banks at 6 percent interest rate in a bid to bring down the lending rate to a single digit.

The development comes after two separate meetings — one with the managing directors of the private banks and the other with the state banks — at its headquarters in the capital.

“Bangladesh Bank has assured the private banks of extending policy support to lower the interest rates,” Abu Hena Mohd Razee Hassan, deputy governor, told reporters after the meetings.

A number of banks had informed the central bank that they have already started to implement the single digit interest rate for lending and the rest would follow the decision within the shortest possible time, he said.

Standard Bank, a private commercial lender, complained that Agrani, a state bank, had denied keeping the inter-bank placement (deposit) fund with them at the 6 percent rate.

Mamun-Ur-Rashid, managing director of Standard Bank, confirmed the episode with The Daily Star, but he declined to comment further on the matter.

Agrani invested the fund in Standard Bank three months ago at 10.5 percent interest and it matured yesterday.

Standard Bank yesterday requested Agrani to keep the fund for another three months at 6 percent interest but the state bank refused to do so.

Mohammad Shams-Ul Islam, managing director of Agrani, said the bank would lend to private banks at 6 percent interest — in line with the central bank’s directive.

He, however, said he is now aware of his bank’s move to withdraw funds from Standard Bank.

Syed Mahbubur Rahman, chairman of the Association of Bankers, Bangladesh, a platform of MDs and CEOs of private banks, told reporters that the interest rate on lending has started to come down to single digit from July 1 in line with the decision taken by the sponsors of private banks.

“We asked the central bank to provide policy support to private banks so that we can implement the single digit rate unilaterally.”

The ABB also requested the central bank to deal with a soft hand any bank which fails to maintain the loan-deposit ratio and the liquidity coverage ratio while implementing the single digit rate, said Rahman, also the managing director of Dhaka Bank.

The state banks and private banks decided on June 21 to lower the lending and deposit rates to 9 percent and 6 percent respectively.

The move comes weeks after the government showered them with a raft of privileges, drawing criticism from different quarters.