Published:  07:47 AM, 18 April 2024

Restoring people’s confidence on financial sector is essential

 
Bangladesh's financial sector is struggling to win back people's trust mainly due to the deterioration of some key indicators amid a lack of good governance, irregularities and lighter punishment for wrongdoers, according to analysts.
 
Banks and non-banking financial institutions are facing mounting non-performing loans (NPLs), while the claim settlement ratio in the insurance sector is far below the global average.

Similarly, market capitalization of the stock market remains at a low level as the number of listed companies is small and investors' participation is falling amid persisting uncertainty.

The financial sector has been in bad shape at a time when Bangladesh plans to become a developed nation by 2041. The situation has prompted analysts to recommend the government focus on putting the financial sector on the right track so that it can contribute properly to the country's development journey.

Zahid Hussain, a former lead economist of the World Bank's Dhaka office, thinks the confidence crisis is stemming mainly from a lack of corporate governance and regulatory governance.

He said the lack of corporate governance is causing a drop in asset quality. For instance, related party loans among the directors of banks are rising day by day but those funds are not extended following due diligence.

"How can people trust that their funds are being utilized professionally and ethically when they see it?"

"Furthermore, when people see that regulators are allowing the non-compliance of financial institutions, the confidence crisis aggravates."

Hussain cited that the central bank recently deferred provision shortfalls worth about Tk 50,000 crore involving 16 banks for a period of up to nine years. "It encouraged good lenders to get involved in bad practices. If the financial sector keeps suffering from the confidence crisis, it might be a cause for a middle-income trap for Bangladesh."

With the healthy growth of the economy, people's income will rise, which will give them more scope to save. But Hussain thinks if savers do not keep the funds in banks, stock markets or insurance companies, how will investment be financed.

"So, the government should work on stopping the source of the confidence crisis—lack of governance—in order to help Bangladesh become a developed nation."

Faruq Ahmad Siddiqi, a former chairman of the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission, echoed the same sentiment, saying the whole financial sector is suffering from a confidence crisis mainly due to the lack of good governance.

He thinks in the banking sector, the struggle sometimes comes from mismanagement, indiscipline, irregularities, rescheduling, and default loans. The banking sector is burdened with a higher NPL, which stood at Tk 131,621 crore in March, up 16 per cent from a year earlier, data from the Bangladesh Bank showed.



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