[PHNOM PENH POST]
Two Cambodian banks have set aside US$200 million for loans to bolster
the Kingdom’s struggling rice-milling industry, officials said
yesterday.
The move comes as the Cambodian government has called
on the private sector to boost loans to rice millers during the harvest
season as a way to curb paddy exports to neighbouring countries.
ANZ
Royal Bank and Canadia Bank said yesterday they would prioritise
lending to rice millers given the government presently lacks the funds
necessary to subsidise the still-developing sector.
“ANZ Royal
is very keen to expand it’s lending to rice millers. In fact, I’d be
happy to make $100 million available today for millers with the right
credit quality,” CEO Stephen Higgins said.
The lending market to
rice millers is very competitive at the moment, Higgins noted, as many
banks have been aggressive in chasing potential customers.
Canadia
has also set aside $100 million to loan to the agriculture sector,
especially rice millers, Vice President Dieter Billmeier said yesterday.
He noted that agriculture loans account for 8 per cent of all the
bank’s loans, and the rice industry comprises a significant part of that
lending.
The government has reached out to the private sector
to provide much-needed capital to rice millers, as public funding as of
now cannot meet the industry’s need.
“The problem is a lack of
capital to buy rice for stock. We need US$200 million to $300 million.
If we don’t have enough, the rice will flow to other countries,” Son
Koun Thor, general director of state-run Rural Development Bank, said on
Monday.
RDB holds $60 million in working capital for loans to
rice millers, Son Koun Thor said. Beyond that figure, some commercial
banks are working with the industry as well.
Chhun Thom, a rice
miller in Prey Veng province, where most unmilled rice is shipped to
Vietnam, agreed that paddy-buying capacity is constrained by companies’
small budgets.
“Of course, we got some money from the bank, but
it is still limited unless we have enough collateral” to ensure the
loans, he said. “But if we don’t have that collateral, we cannot get the
loans.”
Prime Minister Hun Sen had said previously that Cambodia
will export 1 million tonnes of milled rice by 2015, however experts
have countered that the country lacks the milling capacity necessary to
meet that goal.
Much of the country’s unmilled rice is shipped
to Thailand and Vietnam for processing. As a result, help from the
private sector will be crucial, Son Koun Thor said.
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