Kathmandu, Dec. 23
The Banking Sector Reform Recommendation Task Force
(BSRFRF) has urged the banking sector to immediately resume concessional loan
programmes by taking responsibility for remaining government subsidies, to be
reimbursed from dividends, to revitalise economic activity.
“Adopt a policy of granting regulatory relaxations to
uplift the sluggish economy without compromising the interests of depositors,”
recommended the Task Force led by former Chairperson of
the Securities Board of Nepal (SEBON) and economist Dr. Rewat Bahadur Karki,
and comprising former President of the Nepal Bankers’ Association Bhuvan Kumar
Dahal and Executive Director of the Bank and Financial Institutions Regulation
Department of Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) Guru Prasad Paudel.
The Task Force was formed on 13 June 2025. It
submitted its report to the Governor of the NRB, Dr. Biswo Nath Poudel, on
Tuesday.
It said that it is necessary to provide
additional credit based on business potential and collateral enterprises
seeking to restart or scale up in the post-COVID scenario, and to arrange for
the restructuring and rescheduling of secured loans while prioritising
depositor interest.
Other suggestions include increasing limits
for group-based loans and collateral-based entrepreneurial loans provided by
microfinancial institutions, reviewing and reforming the rules regarding the
blacklisting of borrowers, and ensuring easy access to
business loans up to Rs. 500,000 in rural areas and Rs. 1 million in urban
areas with appropriate collateral.
“Review priority sector lending by
studying demand in essential areas like education, health, and transport, and
provide incentives for these sectors. Adopt policies to encourage sectors
identified under the Green Taxonomy,” the Task Force directed the NRB.
Likewise, the Task Force has recommended developing a
mechanism for effective coordination with the private sector to promote
economic expansion and development.
For better regulation and supervision, it
asked to take steps to structure the Board of Directors of banks and financial
institutions (BFIs) to minimise conflicts of interest that arise when an
individual is both a banker and a large businessman.
Adopt a policy to prioritise risk-based effective
supervision and place high importance on healthy regulation and
customer-friendly banking, it said.
According to the Task Force, the NRB should
implement ‘Basic Regulation, More Supervision’ concept by classifying the BFIs
into first, second and third tiers based on defined standards. It also
suggested the NRB to rewrite directives and circulars to apply separately to
first, second and third-tier institutions as required. Currently, the NRB
issues a single circular for all classes of BFIs.
Likewise, it has pointed to a need for a separate
legal regulatory body for microfinance institutions due to their unique model
and expansion. Until then, regulation should be strictly handled by the
Microfinance Department of the central bank. A separate regulator for
non-banking institutions such as the Employees Provident Fund, Citizen
Investment Trust, and Social Security Fund has also been recommended.
To facilitate effective credit flow in
rural areas and revitalise the village economy, the Task Force has suggested
the governor visit rural regions every month to interact with stakeholders on
economic potential and credit demand.
It has also asked to appoint a team of
‘financial gurus’ (comprising a successful businessman, a non-resident Nepali
and a banker) in interested local municipalities, and task such teams with
identifying opportunities for high-value addition agriculture and industry
rather than traditional farming.
Similarly, recommendations on mergers include
making arrangements for the institutions with cross-holding to undergo mergers,
facilitating the speedy completion of the merger process and granting the
merging institutions the authority to decide on swap ratios and processes as
per prevailing laws.
The Task Force has also offered
recommendations on removing Nepal from the ‘Grey List’ of the Financial Action
Task Force. “There is a need to develop the Financial Information Unit (FIU) at the NRB
into a separate, independent entity as per the fifth amendment of the
Anti-Money Laundering Act. Despite the separation of the FIU, the NRB must play
a special and more powerful role in removing Nepal from the Grey List,” reads
the report.
It has pointed to the possible conflict of
interest between the NRB and Nepal Stock Exchange (Nepse) and suggested to
recall NRB representatives from the Board of Directors of the latter.
To support capital market development, the
Task Force has recommended to facilitate the entry of Non-Resident Nepalese (NRNs)
into the secondary market through banking and foreign exchange policies, and initiate
government action to reduce the capital gains tax for NRNs from 25 per cent to
7.5 per cent - matching the rate for local Nepali investors.
Take necessary steps for Rastriya Banijya Bank to go
public with a 30 per cent IPO as per previous cabinet decisions, it has said.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 24 December 2025.
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