Nepal: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that the Nepali financial system will face further stress due to the lack of progress in addressing the deficiencies identified by the Asia Pacific Group of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).
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photo; TKP |
This
may further deteriorate Nepali bank balance sheets.
The
profits of
After
a field visit to Nepal in December last year as a part of a mutual evaluation
of Nepal’s compliance, the Asia Pacific Group prepared a report and shared it
with Nepal, pointing out Nepal’s failure to criminalise corruption involving
the private sector as one of the country’s deficiencies in complying with the
standards on anti-money laundering and terrorist financing.
“Improving
the anti‑money laundering/combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT)
framework and its effectiveness in line with international standards and peer
evaluations is urgently needed to maintain smooth access to the global
financial system,” the IMF said.
Reforms
to implement the 2021 IMF Safeguards Assessment recommendations regarding the
Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) Act and NRB audit are a priority, it added.
The
IMF said that bank supervision and regulation, however, have improved with the
rolling out of new supervisory information systems, the Working Capital Loan
Guidelines and Asset Classification Regulations.
Low
domestic demand helped resolve external pressures, but also deflated government
revenue and led to a widening of the fiscal deficit despite expenditure
control, the IMF said.
“Inflation
is declining, but remains high at 8.2 percent in September. Growth is expected
to recover to 3.5 percent in the current fiscal year 2023-24, which is
It
said that risks are skewed to the downside. External sector risks dominate
Following
the executive board discussion on November 29, Bo Li, deputy managing director and
acting chair of IMF, said, “
He
said that reserves continue to rise without the need to use distortive import
restrictions.
“Fiscal
discipline was maintained in 2022-23 despite a large revenue shortfall.
The
IMF said that with growth below potential, boosting the execution of capital
spending while maintaining fiscal discipline —growth-friendly consolidation—is
critical to provide much-needed stimulus to near-term economic growth and
achieve investments that will underpin medium-term growth.
Maintaining
momentum on governance reforms is critical to cementing recent gains in fiscal
transparency, it said. “Further structural reforms, including to mobilise
domestic revenue, strengthen public investment management and address fiscal
risks, are needed to bolster medium-term fiscal sustainability.”
The
IMF said as monetary policy transmission appears weak in the context of balance
sheet repair and inflation is elevated —though declining—maintaining the
current cautious and data-dependent monetary policy is appropriate for
preserving price and external stability.
Financial
policy should remain vigilant and focused on building regulatory frameworks to
avoid further boom-bust cycles and establish a more stable, pro-growth
financial sector equilibrium, it said.
“Reforms
regarding lending practices and asset classification are encouraging and need
to be continued as preparations for the loan portfolio review of the ten
largest banks gather steam.”
It
added that the implementation of the financial sector reform agenda should
continue with a view to aligning the local framework more closely to
international standards.
Meanwhile,
on November 29, the executive board of the IMF completed the third review under
the four‑year Extended Credit Facility (ECF) for
This
brings total disbursements to
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