The amount is six times what the government provided the bank for this fiscal year, which ends in March.
“We have already received a loan of five million and have requested another loan of 30 million kyats,” San Thein said.
The government provided the loan at a low rate, allowing the bank to lend to SMEs at 8.5 percent rather than the usual rate of 13 percent.
San Thein also said that the bank was
working with agencies from other countries, including Germany, to
provide technical assistance to SMEs. It recently signed a memorandum of
understanding with the Industrial Bank of Korea that will see the
Korean lender provide it with technical expertise, he added.
Myanmar’s under developed banking system poses numerous challenges to the development of SMEs, including high interest rates and the absence of long-term loans.
Myanmar
Central Bank deputy director-general Thein Zaw said SMEs also face
challenges in providing required guarantees and collateral. Financial
management skills are very weak and there is no systematic gathering of
statistics and other data, he said.
It is estimated that there are more than 120,000 SMEs in Myanmar and that more than 90 percent of them are in the industrial sector, but less than half are registered with the government.
source: Eleven Myanmar
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