Business World

Big banks fail to meet required MSME lending

- Melissa Luz T. Lopez

BIG BANKS remained stingy in providing loans to small firms as they continued to miss the mandated credit quotas provided by law, latest data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed.

The banking industry extended P549.887 billion to these small businesses as of June, which is below the P690.371 billion which they should have lent out as provided under the Magna Carta for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMEs).

This represente­d roughly eight percent of the total P6.904 trillion loan portfolio, according to central bank data. However, the amount increased by 10.5% from the P497.767 billion credit extended during the same period in 2017.

Passed into law in 2008, Republic Act No. 9501 prescribes that banks must set aside 8% of their total loanable funds for micro and small firms while 2% should be allotted for medium-sized lenders, with the goal of boosting MSMEs by handing them credit for production and expansion.

The Philippine­s had 915,726 registered enterprise­s in 2016. Of these, 89.6% were classified as micro-sized, 5% small and 4% medium, and 0.4% large, according to the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

Universal, commercial and thrift banks largely missed the minimum loan lines for micro and small firms. Broken down, the big players only provided P152.411 billion credit, which stood at just 2.54% of the P5.99 trillion loanable funds they held as of the first semester.

Thrift lenders also handed out P44.135 billion to small businesses, accounting for 5.45% of their loanable funds versus the eight percent standard. Only rural and cooperativ­e banks met the requiremen­t as they provided 21.9% of their loanable funds to micro and small players worth P22.98 billion.

Micro enterprise­s are those with less than 10 employees and assets worth P3 million or lower, while small firms have between 10-99 workers with assets less than P15 million. Meanwhile, medium-sized firms are those with 100-199 employees and assets worth up to P100 million.

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