LAHORE: Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue Mohammad Aurangzeb has termed the banking sector’s recommendations for three priority sectors — small and medium enterprises (SMEs), digital and technology, agriculture — vital for promoting growth and sustainability.
In a meeting with a delegation of the Pakistan Banks’ Association (PBA), the minister stated that the purpose of this initiative was to encourage the entire sector to contribute to these priority sectors according to their size, unique offerings, and strengths.
While there will be no “directed lending,” there shall be voluntary targets set between the banks and the regulator to share the responsibility of contributing to these critical sectors.“I expect that the banks will continue to work with the government in the revival and growth of the economy,” he hoped.
Key recommendations in the agriculture sector included restructuring crop loan insurance schemes to integrate crop yield factors, revitalising agricultural cooperative banks, and upgrading provincial agricultural cooperative legislation to facilitate the creation of agricultural cooperative lending institutions.
The recommendations also included exploring technology-driven solutions to facilitate the distribution of targeted subsidies through banks, particularly to subsistence-level farmers, similar to Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP), to promote much-needed financial inclusion.
The meeting focused on enhancing support by the banks for the three key sectors — agriculture, SMEs, and digital and technology in Pakistan. The discussion underlined the banking sector’s commitment to fostering financial inclusion in the country.
During the session, PBA Chairman Zafar Masud, along with the steering committee members on these initiatives, presented a comprehensive set of recommendations. The proposals were developed in close consultation with the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) to ensure they effectively address the unique challenges and highlight the opportunities within each sector.
Similarly, it was resolved that banks actively provide financial and management support to entities such as the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Authority (SMEDA) and National Credit Guarantee Company Limited (NCGCL).
The minister was apprised that PBA and SBP were actively engaged in revising SME Prudential Regulations, enhancing clean financing limits, and reviewing regulatory retail portfolio limits to facilitate SME financing.
He was also informed that PBA was contemplating establishing an “SME and Agriculture Index” to target customers currently outside the documented economy, besides enhancing credit risk management.