Kathmandu, Dec. 29
Governor of the Nepal
Rastra Bank (NRA) Maha Prasad Adhikari has directed the banks and financial
institutions (BFIs) to apply caution while mobilising credit warning that the
inflated deposits may be lent to the risky areas.
Credit is growing in
recent months after the months-long lockdown and business closure but you must
be cautious in mobilising it as there are risks of investing in risky sectors
due to the growing competition, he said while speaking at the annual function
of Nepal Bankers’ Association (NBA).
The large funds
accumulated in the BFIs has pressurised them to invest it aggressively.
The governor suggested
to channelise the investment to the productive sector.
“Private sector lending
is gradually increasing. The credit demand was not encouraging in the beginning
of the current fiscal year but it has shown good signs now,” said Adhikari.
Class ‘A’ commercial
banks alone have mobilised Rs. 4200 billion in deposits and Rs. 3200 billion in
loans.
He also said that the
central bank had given priority to the electronic payment system.
“We are replacing the
traditional payment system with the modern and technological one. Financial
infrastructure is already created. So all stakeholders should give priority to
the electronic payments,” he said.
NRB has launched a QR
code payment campaign and recently implemented it at the Naxal Vegetable Market
in collaboration with Sanima Bank. According to the NRB, QR-based payment will
reduce the dependency on the imported technology and cards. It’s a safe method
in case of COVID-19 like pandemic as well.
Governor Adhikari said
that the central bank must use instruments to control wrongdoing in the markets
and facilitate the banking industry. However, we are not interested in the
micro-management of any bank and financial institutions (BFIs), he said.
Earlier in the
programme, Pawan Kumar Golyan, Chairman of Confederation of Bank and Financial
Institutions of Nepal (CBFIN), had said that NRB’s micro-management wouldn’t
have good impacts so the central bank should work it in coordination with the
NBA.
He also said that there
were multiple changes in the Monetary Policy of 2020/21 in the past five months
which had created confusion among the bankers and customers.
On the occasion, NBA
facilitated former Governor of the NRB Satyendra Pyara Shrestha.
He said that saving and
investment were key to the growth of the economy and development of the
country.
Bhuvan Dahal, President
of the NBA, said that the technology-based banking had been expanded to rural
and remote areas as well.
Commercial bank’s
capital fund is above the NRB-set limit so the depositors must not be worried
about the safety of their deposit, said Dahal.
Chief Executive Officer
of Agricultural Development Bank Limited Anil Upadhyaya has been elected
unanimously as the Vice-president of the association. Likewise, Santosh Koirala
of Machhapuchchhre Bank Limited and Deepak Kumar De of Nepal SBI Bank Limited
are elected as the members.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 30 December 2020.