The government is under pressure to inject fresh funds into the state-owned banks and to bail them out of the capital crunch spawned by a recent series of financial scams, officials said.
The state-owned banks, including the country’s largest commercial bank Sonali, have already sought fresh funds, after the little-known Hallmark Group had embezzled around Tk 3,600 crore from a Sonali Bank branch allegedly by the blessings of certain ruling alliance quarters, they said.
Fund crisis at Sonali Bank has been so acute that it could not provide a loan to Biman Bangladesh Airlines for procuring new aircraft late last year.
The government was forced to arrange the loan from the Sonali Bank incorporated in the UK.
Economists have already called on the government to inject fresh capital into the beleaguered SoBs to revive them.
They, however, suggested that the government should maintain certain criteria in injecting fresh funds and enhance monitoring to prevent any misappropriation of funds in the future.
The International Monetary Fund has echoed the economists, saying the government should inject fresh capital into the SoBs to bail them out of the crisis, officials said.
‘Recapitalise the state-owned banks in FY14,’ said the multilateral lending agency in a letter to the government, following the visit of an IMF delegation to Dhaka early this month.
The IMF also advised the government to formulate a strategy for strengthening the SoBs, including Sonali and BASIC Bank, after making a ‘special diagnosis’ by next June.
The IMF team visited here to assess the overall economic situation in the outgoing fiscal year in line with its Extended Credit Facility deal with the government.
The team members said recapitalisation of the SoBs should aim at covering the fund shortage being faced by them.
The SoBs have landed in a serious fund constraint after being swindled by certain vested quarters, they observed.
The fund embezzlement by Hallmark Group from Sonali Bank Ruposhi Bangla Branch early last year can be described as the single biggest financial fraud in the country’s history.
Finance minister AMA Muhith on February 26 told parliament that eight state-owned specialised and private commercial banks had a total capital deficit of Tk 7,149.56 crore as of September 30, 2012.
Officials said the situation deteriorated further as the Bangladesh Bank unearthed unreported defaulted loans to the tune of Tk 4,359.11 crore in the four state-owned commercial banks – Sonali, Janata, Agrani, and Rupali.
Former Bangladesh Bank governor Saleh Uddin Ahmed said the state-owned banks were facing capital shortfall due to unprecedented loan scams.
‘Loan disbursement on political considerations and lack of monitoring by the authorities concerned are mainly blamed for the situation,’ he said.
Former caretaker government adviser Mirza Azizul Islam said the law should be changed to stop political interference in bank operations.
He said the masterminds behind the Hallmark Group scam and the Sonali Bank officials involved in it should be brought to justice.
Officials said the IMF suggested the government should set aside a bank recapitalisation fund in the new budget to be announced early June.
The IMF also has asked the government to chalk out a new strategy for running the SoBs. It wanted the government to sign a revised memorandum of understanding on the SoBs by this month. The IMF said the government should make a ‘special diagnosis’ of the SoBs by a special wing under the central bank.
The IMF has made a commitment to provide the government with around $1 billion in seven instalments under the ECF. It has already disbursed two instalments in the past one year, after the government complied with some major conditions. (Source)