[PHNOM PENH POST]
Cambodia's microfinance industry yesterday responded to Prime Minister
Hun Sen’s call to aid farmers affected by the worst floods in a decade
by claiming lenders were already taking steps to offer relief.
About 350,000 Cambodians were affected by floods that swept through
large areas of the country between September and November last year, Hun
Sen said during a speech on Tuesday at the Ministry of Rural
Development.
As a result, thousands were struggling to repay loans to MFIs.
Hun Sen then requested that interest rates on outstanding loans be frozen and payment deadlines suspended.
But
yesterday, the 30-member Cambodian Microfinance Association claimed
during a meeting with Economy and Finance Minister Keat Chhon that it
had already eliminated interest on loans to families affected by last
year’s floods and would not seize property from flood victims in the
event of default.
Microfinance institutions had not publicised
the measures extended to flood victims because they feared an influx of
false claims, CMA director Bun Mony told the Post.
“We had
already taken the measures before the prime minister suggested them, but
we did not publicly announce it because we wanted to avoid some clients
who wanted to take advantage,” he said.
“What we are afraid of is someone who wants to spoil the industry.”
Bun Mony claimed that no property had been, or would be, confiscated from flood-affected borrowers who defaulted on their loans.
Fewer
than one per cent of microfinance borrowers had been affected by the
floods, and the ratio of non-performing loans had decreased in 2011 to
0.25 per cent from 0.9 per cent the year before, he said.
According
a survey conducted in January by Oxfam, Care, Pact and CRS, nearly
two-thirds of the 400 flood-affected households surveyed had taken loans
from MFIs or unofficial lenders.
About 60 per cent of households
said they had difficulty repaying the loans, and about six per cent
said they had no hope of making repayments.
MFIs have been under fire for practices some economists have called unsustainable.
Interest
rates between 25 and 45 per cent a year have the potential to
destabilise Cambodia’s agriculture sector as farmers default on loans,
some of the Kingdom’s leading economists have said.
Concerns
about informal microlending, which some Cambodian farmers employ to pay
off debt to microfinancers, still exist among government officials and
members of civil society.
Informal loans often carry interest rates of more than 50 per cent a year.
Economy
and Finance Minister Keat Chhon told the meeting with MFIs the
government would take measures to deal with unofficial lenders.
In
Channy, president and CEO of ACLEDA Bank, said the bank lent US$167
million in microloans but had only 63 borrowers affected by floods.
“Our
bank had already suspended repayments and frozen interest on the loans.
No property seizures have been made,” In Channy said.
The floods had only slightly affected the industry, National Bank of Cambodia governor Chea Chanto said.
He confirmed that MFIs had been quietly helping borrowers affected by the floods.
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