Central
bank acts as credit fund goes rogue
The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) office in
the southern province of Dong Nai is investigating the delay in repaying
principal and interest by the Thai Binh People’s Credit Fund to 82 customers
in Bien Hoa City’s Tan Hoa Ward.
According to the customers, they had deposited nearly
VND50 billion (US$2.2 million) but have not received interest since the
middle of last year and have also been unable to withdraw their deposit.
Meanwhile, the director of the fund, Vu Cong Lien,
reportedly quit his job and is absconding.
The case has opened authorities’ eyes to the need to
carefully manage people’s credit funds across the country so that system does
not collapse or many of them go bankrupt.
Analysts said the most important measures include
oversight and inspection of their operations.
According to the Viet Nam Association of People’s
Credit Funds, there are more than 1,100 such funds with 1.8 million members
and deposits of VND88 trillion ($3.9 billion).
Thus, potentially a lot of people could be affected.
Employees of many of the funds said they are managed in
a very loose manner.
To compete with banks, the funds always offer very high
interest rates to depositors, often 4-5 per cent higher than bank rates.
The deposits are often lent to individuals or
organisations involved in high-risk sectors like real estate.
But authorities responsible for overseeing the people’s
credit funds said they are all now under the management of the SBV and the
Cooperative Bank of
In addition, the Deposit Insurance of Viet Nam also has
special control over the funds.
The question is why, despite multiple agencies managing
and controlling the people’s credit funds, such violations are occurring so
often.
Tran Quoc Tuan, director of the SBV office in Dong Nai
Province, said managers of funds that act dubiously clean up their balance
sheets ahead of audits by authorised agencies before again lending money to
high-risk sectors like real estate.
An official from the SBV’s department for banking
system safety supervision admitted that management and oversight of people’s
credit funds remain poor.
So it is necessary to strengthen internal control and
audit, and ensure the funds comply with the laws on cooperatives, one of
which requires them to lend only to members.
Analysts said the model is appropriate for
The central bank plans to restructure the credit funds
after first identifying weak ones. The weak funds that cannot be improved
will have their licences withdrawn.
Besides, many new funds will also be set up in rural
areas.
Transporters hit hard by taxes, fees
Huynh Huu Trung, owner of a transport company based in
The rest of his vehicles are only operating for 15-20
days a month and so the company’s turnover is down sharply, he said.
Many trucking firms in the country are in a similar
plight, with many facing a danger of being shut down.
Do Xuan Phu, director of the Minh Lien Transportation
Company, said he had to significantly reduce the number of vehicles in
operation as well as staff but business situation has not improved.
He said in the past when the transportation industry
was still profitable, every container truck could operate for 275 days a year
and not run the other 90 days because they were weekends and festivals, and
there were days when they had to stop for repairs or maintenance.
Recently, the number of working days has decreased
because of fierce competition.
Since April 2014, after the Ministry of Transport
cracked down on overloading and other violations, many companies with goods
to transport bought their own vehicles instead of hiring them.
Thus, transport operators are competing for an
increasingly smaller pie.
This has in turn brought freight rates down, affecting
their turnover.
Meanwhile, taxes and fees have been increasing.
Transport firms are shouldering a heavy burden of more
than 10 different taxes and fees, including road maintenance fee, toll fee
and parking fee.
The road maintenance fee alone comes to at least
VND17.16 million ($756) a year per vehicle.
According to the HCM City Cargo Transport Association,
toll now costs even more than fuel because a majority of the main roads
collect toll.
For instance, fuel for a trip between HCM City and Vung
Tau City costs around VND750,000 ($33) (for 60 litres of diesel) while the
total charges for using the roads come to VND800,000.
Fuel for a trip from
Most trucking firms are small or medium-sized, and many
depend on bank loans to buy their vehicles and run their business. The
ballooning costs are making it unsustainable for them.
According to a report from the Road Maintenance Fund,
since 2013 it has collected more than VND43.45 trillion.
According to the Viet Nam Auto Transport Association,
both road maintenance and toll fees have to be paid on several routes in the
country.
But the director of the Viet Nam Road Administration,
Nguyen Van Huyen, said the road maintenance fees only meet 43 per cent of the
cost of maintaining roads.
The country has a total of 575,000km of roads,
including 23,000km of highways.
Deputy Prime Minister Trinh Dinh Dung has instructed
the Ministry of Transport to check toll rates to ensure they are calculated
in a scientific and practical manner to ease transport firms’ burden while
still ensuring the proper maintenance of the country’s road network.
VNS
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Thứ Ba, 5 tháng 12, 2017
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