SMEs can borrow investment capital for supporting industries
HA NOI -
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) can borrow up to 70 per cent of the
capital they need for investing in supporting industries prioritised by the
government from February 22.
This is stated in the State Bank of
Viet Nam's (SBV's) Circular No 01/2016/TT-NHNN, which was issued on February
4 to provide guidelines for a decree on the development of supporting
industries.
Decree No 111/2015/ND-CP, issued
last November 3, said preferential policies related to credit, taxes and land
rents would be offered to projects applying new technology, equipment and
manufacturing processes that can help increase their production capacity by
at least 20 per cent.
It also said the money borrowed by
the SMEs must be guaranteed by credit underwriting organisations, and the
SMEs must register a mortgage value of at least 15 per cent of the loans at
the lending institutions.
The firms should also have at least
a 20 per cent stake in the investment projects, and they must not owe
anything to the state budget or be responsible for any bad loans with any
lenders.
According to the circular, credit
institutions and foreign banks' branches in Viet Nam will finance the
prioritised projects with short-term loans in dong, with interest
rates being equal to or less than the specific rates set by the central
bank's governor at certain periods of time.
The Viet Nam Development Bank and
other organisations authorised in conformity with the law would be the
guarantors of the SME loans, the circular said.
Industry insiders asked, however,
whether the loan incentives could truly help domestic SMEs take part in the
development of supporting industries, as Viet Nam integrated more deeply with
the global economy.
As the country has entered into a
variety of free trade agreements, especially the large Trans-Pacific
Partnership trade deal, multi-national companies might take up supply chains
right in the domestic market.
Yasuzumi Hirotaka, chief
representative of the Japan External Trade Organisation in HCM City, told
news website enternews.vn that Viet Nam still lacked a solid foundation for
supporting industries, with the enterprises being internally weak.
"There is a high risk that many
of them will have to withdraw from the market. This will be clearly seen in
the next one year or two, so the domestic firms need timely support from the
government to improve their strength now," he said.
He said about four million SMEs were
offered low interest rates for loans in Japan, following government policies.
In Viet Nam, SMEs and support
industries are among several areas that the government prioritises for
funding, besides exports, high-tech firms and agriculture and rural
development.
According to the latest SBV report
on dong lending rates, commercial banks applied rates of six to seven per
cent per year for short-term loans, and nine to 10 per cent per year for
medium to long-term loans, in the prioritised sectors in January.
In normal business areas, the
short-term rates were between 6.8 per cent and nine per cent per year, and
the medium to long-term rates were between 9.3 per cent and 11 per cent per
year.- VNS
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Thứ Sáu, 12 tháng 2, 2016
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