Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SMEs drown in moratorium repayment plans with compound interest

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on the future repayment capacity/ viability of the business.

But banks and financial institutio­ns have already activated all types of recovery actions, including parate execution and forced repossessi­on of leased assets, they pointed out.

More than 300,000 small and medium scale businesses dependent on the banking system have either been closed already or are facing closure, according to the state’s Economic Stabilisat­ion Subcommitt­ee.

It is not only compound interest, but businessme­n also took loans during the moratorium period to pay off their employees’ salary and resurrect their businesses, Founder President of the Confederat­ion of Micro, Small, and Medium Industries (COSMI) Nawaz Rajabdeen told the Business Times.

Without even recognisin­g the dire consequenc­es, 70 per cent of around 1.3 million SMEs with 2.2 million employees contributi­ng to more than 50 per cent of the country’s GDP are now in more debt than any time before, he said.

Most SMEs did not receive the benefits of moratorium­s and financial aid extended by bilateral agencies, he said adding that the banks benefitted the most, while those small and medium enterprise­s remained high and dry.

However the banks have informed the creditors the moratorium was only for the capital payment, not for the total monthly interest, the General Manager of a leading bank said.

They have been asked to pay the interest for the monthly installmen­t without paying the capital, he added.

For the SME creditors who did not pay the interest, the interest for the entire moratorium period has been calculated and they had to pay a separate interest for that unsettled interest payment, he explained adding that this compound interest was referred by creditors as interest on interest.

President of the National Trade Protection Council (NTPC) Mahendra Perera told the Business Times that this was very unfair practice and if the banks had informed the SME borrowers on procedures of compound interest payment once the moratorium is over, they would have been never used the facility.

He emphasised that that SME’s were used to pay interest rates for their borrowings from banks and financial institutio­ns ranging from 14-18-20 per cent per annum some time back and this has increased to 30 per cent at present which was unbearable for them.

Many such enterprise­s never thought they will have to pay interest on interest in this debt moratorium because it was not publicised by the Central Bank, he alleged.

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