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Vietnam
may stop guaranteeing SOEs' loans as public debt rises
In an attempt to keep public debt in
control, the Vietnamese government may stop guaranteeing state-owned
enterprises' loans.
The
Ministry of Finance has said in its recent proposal that the government needs
to stop guaranteeing such loans for new projects starting next year and
increase its overseeing of loans assigned to existing ones.
The
goal is to reduce these government-backed loans to 15.6 percent of public
debt by the end of 2020, it said.
Figures
showed SOEs borrowed nearly US$21 billion with the government's guarantee as
of the end of last year, or 17.6 percent of public debt.
In
2011-15, the government guaranteed $15.6 billion in loans for 35 projects of
SOEs, a three-fold increase from 2007-10, according to the finance ministry.
Electricity
of Vietnam, oil giant PetroVietnam and national carrier Vietnam Airlines were
among top borrowers backed by the government, it said.
In
another move, the ministry also sought to reduce government-guaranteed bonds issued
by the Vietnam Development Bank and the Vietnam Bank for Social Policies over
the next four years.
The
growth of the banks' outstanding bonds, estimated at around VND161.47
trillion at the end of last year, must be slowed down to 4-6 percent a year
from 10 percent at the moment, according to the ministry.
It
is "a big risk" when the banks issue more bonds with a maturity of
less than five years and then provide loans to projects with terms of seven
to 10 years, it said.
Latest
figures released by the government in May showed Vietnam's public debt was
equivalent to 62.2 percent of GDP.
It
will rise to 63.8 percent at the end of this year, and then 64.7 percent in
2018, or slightly lower than the threshold of 65 percent, according to the
World Bank's projections.
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Thứ Bảy, 2 tháng 7, 2016
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