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18 January, 2011

 

Microfinance service not populism: Chuti


Information and Communications Technology Minister Chuti Krairiksh has denied that the government's forthcoming provision of microfinance through Thailand Post is a populist policy.

"It is not giving away money," he said yesterday during a visit to inspect living conditions in Omkoi district in Chiang Mai. Chuti and senior Thailand Post executives also visited a post office to check on its readiness to provide the microfinance service. Omkoi is one of 10 areas across Thailand where Thailand Post will pilot the microfinance service, which is expected to start in February. Chuti said the service was aimed at reaching people who cannot access low-interest loans and providing them with economic opportunities.

"This is not a political campaign but part of the Abhisit government's policy of solving the loan-shark problem," he said. The Thailand Post board last week approved the establishment of a subsidiary to provide microfinance, naming it Thailand Post Loan Ltd.

The move follows Cabinet's approval for Thailand Post to set up a wholly owned subsidiary at a cost of Bt50 million to offer microfinance to those with difficulty accessing conventional loans. It will provide loans of a maximum of Bt10,000 to individuals at low monthly interest rates, expected to be between 1 and 2 per cent. The term for loan repayment will be one year. Those applying for loans will need four guarantors.

Thailand Post will evaluate the subsidiary's performance in six months to see whether it needs to change its loan strategy. It will operate under advice from the Government Savings Bank and the Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives during the initial stages of operation.

The Finance and ICT ministries believe Thailand Post can draw on its 1,200 post offices nationwide and 22,000 employees to provide financial services to the grass roots.

A source at Thailand Post said the board believed that if there is a high proportion of non-performing loans from the microfinance service, the Finance Ministry and Thailand Post should share responsibility. Chuti said Thailand Post Loan would carefully screen those it lent to and not just hand out money to anyone.

Source: The Nation

 1 comments


08 January, 2011

 

Counter Service seeking microfinance opportunity


Published: 12/11/2010 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: Business

Counter Service Ltd, a bill payment service provider, plans to expand into microfinance lending to maximise benefits from its strong infrastructure of 7,000 outlets nationwide and its real-time IT system, says deputy general manager Lalada Dechatiwong Na Ayuthya.

The subsidiary of the 7-Eleven operator CP All Plc proposed its microfinance plan to the Bank of Thailand last year and is awaiting a decision. A response could depend on clarification of microfinance business regulations under the country's Financial Master Plan II.

Counter Service currently offers a wide range of bill-payment services. Providing micro-lending would be a new business opportunity, through outsourcing services for consumer loan applications to financial institutions, said Mrs Lalada.

"The company is looking for more business partners in the financial sector from the partners we have now to ensure we are ready to expand our service after the regulations on microfinance are clear," she said. "They should be experts in providing services for micro-business."

While Counter Service would be another channel for loan applications, credit analysis would be the banks' duty as they had expertise in that area, she added.

Counter Service has 7,000 outlets nationwide, of which 60% are in provincial areas, and the ratio is expected to increase over the next few years. Mrs Lalada said bill payments were the company's core business with around 10 million transactions estimated this year.

The growth rate for the business is around 10% per year and it should remain positive despite higher competition with discount stores, mainly in service fees.

Tesco Lotus and Thailand Post also provide bill payment services with a minimum fee of 5 baht per transaction, while Counter Service charges 10 baht.

Counter Service has collaborated with Krungthai Card, the consumer finance subsidiary of Krung Thai Bank, to provide consumer loan applications. KTC plans to use the Counter Service network to expand its customer base for credit cards and personal loans by 150,000 and 100,000 respectively next year. It currently has 1.7 million credit-card accounts and 500,000 accounts for personal loans.

Source: Bangkok Post

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