Vietnam’s central bank said it will push for bank mergers and
force weak institutions into bankruptcy as it intensifies an overhaul of the
country’s banking system to boost growth.
The
State Bank of
The
Southeast Asian nation is targeting 2015 gross domestic product growth of 6.2
percent from 5.98 percent last year, as the economy shows signs of
improvement on rising exports and investment. The years-long effort to clean
up the banking system is a key component of the government’s drive to
rejuvenate expansion, with lenders facing a year-end deadline to reduce bad
debt to below 3 percent of total loans.
“They
are looking at 2015 as a decisive year,” Alan Pham, Ho Chi Minh City-based
chief economist at VinaCapital Group, the nation’s biggest fund manager, said
by phone. “The central bank is taking a more assertive role. If the banks get
healthier this year, maybe the 6.2 GDP growth is achievable.”
Bank
mergers
The
benchmark VN Index fell 0.2 percent at 1:02 p.m. in
“The
state-owned banks are the ones with the heft to do it,” he said. “At the same
time, if the central bank thinks a weak bank is not salvageable, it is
willing to let it be declared bankrupt.”
The
country’s bad-debt ratio was forecast to fall to as low as 3.7 percent at the
end of 2014 from 5.4 percent in September, according to Prime Minister Nguyen
Tan Dung.
Bloomberg
|
Thứ Sáu, 16 tháng 1, 2015
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