Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lending to agri, land reform beneficiar­ies urged

Government financial institutio­ns pushed to take the lead

- By Amy R. Remo

THE PHILIPPINE Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) has urged government financial institutio­ns (GFIs) to take the lead in providing much needed loans to sectors covered by mandatory lending policies such as those for agricultur­e and agrarian reform beneficiar­ies.

PCCI president Alfredo M. Yao noted that rather than saddling local banks with numer- ous mandates on who or which sectors to lend to--a move that could potentiall­y put some of the smaller banks at risk--it should be the GFIs that should provide the financing requiremen­ts of these sectors.

Yao said that as it is, local banks were often unable to fully comply with these mandatory lending policies given the huge risks involved, prompting a number of them to resort to paying the penalties instead.

There should be more alternativ­e mechanisms that will allow banks to comply without having to pay penalties, he said.

At present, banks are mandated to allocate 10 percent of their loan portfolio to local enterprise­s under Republic Act No. 9405 or the Magna Carta for MSMEs.

Under this law, eight percent of the banks’ credit portfolio should be set aside for micro and small enterprise­s and the remaining two percent for medium-sized companies.

On the other hand, Republic Act 10000 or The Agri-Agra Reform Credit Act of 2009 states that “banks shall set aside at least 25 percent of their total loanable funds for agricultur­e and agrarian reform credit in general, of which at least 10 percent of the total loanable funds shall be made available for agrarian reform beneficiar­ies. Excess compliance in the 10 percent agrarian reform credit may be used to offset a deficiency, if any, in the 15 percent other agricultur­al credit, in general, but not vice versa.”

According to Yao, lending to SMEs was still manageable but lending to agricultur­e and agrarian reform beneficiar­ies was deemed to be a high risk activity.

The government, he added, should allow banks anew to purchase Agrarian Reform (AR) Bonds from the Land Bank of the Philippine­s (LBP) as a form of compliance with RA 10000.

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