The Phnom Penh Post

Rate cap my idea, says Rainsy

- Ananth Baliga

ADAY after the National Bank implemente­d a new 18 percent cap on microfinan­ce loans, purportedl­y on the orders of Prime Minister Hun Sen, former opposition leader Sam Rainsy took to social media to post what appears to be a 2015 email exchange in which he asked the premier for precisely that.

In the posted email, Rainsy, who is living in exile in France, highlights the “financial slavery” faced by Cambodians who have taken high interest rates, suggesting a cap on interest rates charged on loans.

The Facebook post followed Monday’s issuing of a National Bank of Cambodia prakas capping microloan interest rates at 18 percent for new and refinanced loans effective April 1, a move that financial experts have questioned as potentiall­y detrimenta­l to people’s access to finance.

“But he [Hun Sen] didn’t pay much attention to my suggestion until the announceme­nt today of such a measure,” Rainsy posted on March 14. In the email, he recommends an interest rate ceiling of 18 percent, citing similar 12 and 15 percent rate caps in Vietnam and Thailand, respective­ly.

An alleged email from Hun Sen sent the same day, also posted by Rainsy, has the premier saying that the proposal had been sent to relevant ministers to evaluate a rate ceiling. Neither officials at the National Bank and Ministry of Economy and Finance, nor Eang Sophallet, a personal adviser to Hun Sen, could be reached yesterday to corroborat­e Rainsy’s claims.

Rainsy stood by his recommenda­tion of an 18 percent cap yesterday, saying he was happy the government had followed his ad- vice, and that it was indicative that dialogue was needed to address critical issues.

“That’s why, over the last few years, as the opposition leader, I have written to Prime Minister Hun Sen on many occasions to show that the opposition was (and still is) willing to engage with the government in a constructi­ve dialogue,” he said via email.

Asked to address criticisms that the new diktat could curb access to capital for the poor, Rainsy would only say: “No, I think things can work differentl­y.”

But Kem Monovithya, deputy directorge­neral of public affairs for the CNRP, yesterday said the 18 percent rate cap was not the right solution, but suggested that was less because it would curb access to financing, and more because it would increase “unhealthy borrowing” because of lowered rates.

Pointing to a new study reported on by The Post on Wednesday, Monovithya said borrowers were taking high interest loans for nonproduct­ive activities and an interest drop would only perpetuate that behaviour further. “If one takes a microfinan­ce loan to buy a motorbike, that is unhealthy; he won’t be able to pay it back even if with lower interest rate, as the loan doesn’t create or increase his income,” she said, via email.

Monovithya said that well-regulated MFIs and an increase in the financial literacy of borrowers will encourage more “responsibl­e loans”, going on to call for limiting collateral-based loans for those with no income, and the creation of consumer protection mechanisms and personal bankruptcy laws.

 ?? TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP ?? Hun Sen (right) and Sam Rainsy shake hands at the National Assembly in 2013.
TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP Hun Sen (right) and Sam Rainsy shake hands at the National Assembly in 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia