Building
trust: Developing the Vietnam financial sector
Deposit insurance providing
for safe checking and savings accounts at banks and other financial
institutions promotes inclusion for all of Vietnam citizens, says leading
finance and bank executive, Dr Nguyen Tri Hieu.
Dr Hieu says
it particularly helps those households who maintain small account balances,
have little experience with formal financial institutions, as it greatly
assists them plan for a more secure financial future.
Last year,
he says, the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) had to step in and takeover three
weak banks that were about to go bankrupt. Had the banks been allowed
to fail, the small accountholders would have lost all of the moneys they had
on deposit with the banks.
The SBV
therefore protected theses households and as a result the banking system is
now healthier and the nation’s citizens have a great deal more confidence in
it than they otherwise might have.
However, Dr
Hieu says Vietnam has too many banks, which creates an abnormally high risk
that more banks will fail. It is therefore a necessity and in the best
interest of the nation for the SBV to be given authority to step in, rectify
the situation and reduce the number of banks.
The problem
is further complicated by the fact that only a relatively small percentage of
the citizens, estimated at 20-30%, actually utilize banks with the majority
of the population still doing handling most of their daily transactions by
cash.
Vietnam
needs to follow the lead of nations like the US, says Dr Hieu. The US Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation provides deposit insurance to all
accountholders up to US$100,000, with certain retirement accounts covered up
to US$250,000.
As a result,
US depositors have confidence in formal financial institutions and the
banking system, and it plays an instrumental role in promoting financial
inclusion for all and broadens access to the mainstream financial sector.
Japan is
another prime example, highlighting the role of utilizing deposit insurance
as an effective tool to ensure the health of the banking system, while
protecting accountholders and extending financial inclusion to the entire
population, says Mr Hieu.
Through
public awareness initiatives, he says, deposit insurance systems can, without
question, play a meaningful role to ensure that all citizens, particularly
the poor and low-income depositors, are informed about safe methods of
storing their money.
This in turn
will contribute significantly to instilling of trust in the nation’s formal
financial institutions.
Mr Hieu says
the agency in Vietnam that actually insures accountholders is the Deposit
Insurance of Vietnam (DIV) and it should be given more broad authority to
regulate banks and weed out the weak, inefficient banks prone to go bankrupt
and strictly coordinate their efforts with the SBV.
First, with
respect to financial stability, the DIV and the SBV need to strike the right
balance between controlling risks and encouraging innovation in the promotion
of financial inclusion.
They need to
take painstaking care to ensure that the institutional framework and
regulatory oversight supporting the expansion of financial inclusion promotes
and does not undermine financial stability, Mr Hieu says.
A deposit
insurance system is most effective if a number of external elements or
preconditions are in place, including a sound banking system with strong
prudential regulation and supervision and a supportive legal framework.
Second, they
should address the question as to whether membership in the deposit insurance
system is compulsory or voluntary and available to specialized microfinance
providers as well as mainstream banks and under what specific terms and
conditions.
They will
also need to assess the level and scope of coverage provided by the deposit
insurance system, and whether very small deposits in the form of e-money
and/or depositors with the smallest deposit denominations have adequate
protections and under what conditions.
This
involves some rather complex analysis to address emerging issues such as
e-money and pooled trust accounts that support payment transfer services and
the need for and applicability of deposit insurance protections.
Collectively
the DIV and SBV should focus on the implications for deposit insurers of
recent developments such as branchless banking, e-money, and mobile payments,
to expand financial access among the poor.
These
developments— are all very exciting from a financial inclusion perspective,
but also raise a number of interesting questions and challenges for deposit
insurers, says Mr Hieu.
In the final
analysis they are critically important to undermining a solid foundation for
the nation’s financial sector and building competitiveness in an increasingly
integrated global economy.
VOV
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Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 4, 2016
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