Agent banking getting popular with remitters

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jun 07 2017 12:17 pm
Jebun Nesa Alo

Remittance inflow through agent banking rose significantly in the first quarter of 2017 as the service is increasingly gaining ground thanks to its cost-effectiveness.

Banks received Tk 262 crore from January to March through agent banking channel whereas the network brought home Tk 309 crore throughout 2016 when the service was introduced.

While the popularity of agent banking is on the rise, mobile banking, another popular platform for sending money, is losing pace due to higher cost.

Remittance channeled through mobile banking declined 6.66 percent to Tk 22 crore in the first quarter compared to the same quarter a year ago, according to Bangladesh Bank data.

Monthly remittance receipt through mobile banking was Tk 8.12 crore in December last year, which came down to Tk 7.71 crore in March.

Currently 11 banks are providing agent banking service while 17 banks run mobile banking operations.

Remitters prefer agent banking to send money home because it does not require any additional fee to withdraw money from accounts, said a senior executive of a private bank.

But mobile banking charges Tk 2 for cashing out every Tk 100, a fee which is deemed costlier by many beneficiaries, he said.

Mobile banking is mainly popular for local transactions involving small amounts, according to the banker.

The central bank issued the agent banking guideline in 2013 but it was only last year when the licencees started full-fledged operation.

Agent banking offers limited banking and financial services to the underserved population by engaging representatives under an agency agreement. It is the owner of an outlet who conducts banking transactions on behalf of a bank.

Agents provide services such as cash deposits, withdrawals, remittance disbursement, small value loan disbursement, recovery of loans, and cash payments under the government's social safety net programmes.

The number of agent banking accounts rose 31 percent in the first quarter to 712,499 from 544,536 in December. Dutch-Bangla Bank, the leader in agent banking, disbursed Tk 168 crore of remittance in the quarter, followed by Bank Asia and Al-Arafah Islami Bank.

Outstanding balance with agent banking accounts stood at Tk 481 crore in March, which was Tk 380 crore in December. The total number of agents rose to 1,755 in March from 1,646 in December. Social Islami, Modhumoti, Mutual Trust, NRB Commercial, Standard, Agrani, Midland, and First Security Islami Bank also provide agent banking service.

news:daily star/7-jun-2017

Yunus committed seditious offence

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jun 07 2017 11:58 am

Nobel laureate Prof Muhammad Yunus has committed seditious offence by plotting a conspiracy against the Bangladesh government and therefore, he is liable to punishment, experts say.

Grameen Bank founder Yunus used his links with the then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to pressurize the government to drop a pecuniary irregularity investigation against him. 

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s US expatriate son Sajeeb Wazed Joy was asked to convince his mother and the government to stop the investigation against Yunus. Joy was threatened with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audit if he fails to help drop the investigation. 

Recently, the issue came to the fore and sparked controversy at home and abroad. 

Many think that the role of Yunus in using foreign state machinery to put pressure on the government is tantamount to seditious offence.

Hillary should not have interfered in the antenatal affairs of other country. Hillary has shown utter disregard for the international law.

 Dr Tureen Afroz, prosecutor of International Crimes Tribunal, said “According to international law, no country should interfere in internal affairs of other countries. If allegation against Hillary is found to be true, it can be said that she violated the international law.”

 If Yunus is found to be involved in conspiracy against the state, he should be tried for act of treason and be punished, she noted.

 Prof Giasuddin Molla, a political science teacher of Dhaka University and president of Rastrabigyan Samity, said Yunus wanted Hillary to pressurise Bangladesh government to drop investigation against him. “Yunus donated a huge amount of money to Clinton Foundation. He conspired against an elected government of Bangladesh. He should be punished.”

 Recently, US Senate Committee on the Judiciary has taken initiative to verify the allegation that Hillary Clinton used her official position to interrupt an ‘independent investigation’ against Yunus.

 In a letter, committee chairman Senator Chuck Grassley required the State Department to make former deputy chief of mission at the US Embassy in Dhaka Jon Danilowicz available for an interview with the committee members as part of the move to verify the allegation against Hillary.

 

On June 1, Chuck Grassley wrote the letter to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, asking him to provide some information by June 15 in this regard.

 Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s son Sajeeb Wazed Joy living in the US was threatened with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audit if he fails to help drop investigation against Dr Yunus. Grassley wrote: “If the secretary of state used her position to intervene in an independent investigation by a sovereign government simply because of a personal and financial relationship stemming from the Clinton Foundation rather than the legitimate foreign policy interests of the United States, then that would be unacceptable.”

 Yunus was removed from Grameen Bank as its managing director on the grounds of his exceeding the retirement age in 2011. He also faced an allegation of laundering bank fund abroad.

The Nobel laureate filed a writ petition with the High Court challenging the legality of his removal but lost the legal battle.

 According to the letter, Joy had a number of interactions with high-level State Department officials during 2010-2012 period. He faced pressure to drop the investigation.

 Some of the individuals he met include former ambassadors in Dhaka James Moriarty and Dan Mozena, Deputy Chief of Mission Danilowicz and USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah.

 Dr Yunus, Grameen Bank founder, is very close to the Clinton family. Yunus’ companies reportedly donated $100,000 to $250,000 to the Clinton Global Initiative and $25,000 to $50,000 to the Clinton Foundation. After Hillary became US Secretary of State, his relation with the Clinton family deepened.

 On May 11 this year, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said Clinton called her office in March 2011 and demanded that Yunus be restored to his position of chairman of Grameen Bank.

 However, the Bangladesh government has welcomed the move of the US Senate Committee to look into Hillary Clinton’s alleged hands in the interference in an ‘independent investigation’ against Dr Yunus.

news:daily sun/7-jun-2017

No change in excise duty on bank balance, says Muhith

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jun 07 2017 11:29 am

Finance Minister AMA Muhith said the proposed hike in the excise duty on bank-account balance wouldn't be changed, thereby deflating widespread criticism of his budgetary measure.     

"It is not new. The banks have been paying (excise duty) for long number of years. Only the rate and threshold have been changed," he said Tuesday after the launch of Foreign Aid Management System (FAMS) in the city.

Mr Muhith mentioned that the excise-free limit on bank balance has been enhanced to Tk 100,000 from the previous threshold of Tk 20,000.

"I have just raised the threshold and the rate of the duty now."

In the national budget for the next fiscal, the government has proposed Tk 800 as excise duty instead of the current amount of Tk 500 for the bank balance over Tk 100,000.

Economic Relations Division (ERD) organised the launching ceremony of software for FAMS at its office in Dhaka with its Secretary Kazi Shofiqul Azam in the chair.

Planning Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal, State Minister for Finance and Planning MA Mannan, State Minister for ICT Junaid Ahmed Palak, Chief Coordinator for the SDG Affairs M Abul Kalam Azad and ERD Additional Secretary Farida Nasreen also spoke on the occasion.

Asked about the newly proposed uniform 15 per cent VAT, the finance minister said the assembly would discuss the budget and take decision it thinks better.

To a query about lower projection of the estimated GDP growth by some development partners, Mr Muhith said he is hopeful of achieving 7.2 per cent growth in the  outgoing financial year (FY), 2016-17.

"During September-October period of the next fiscal, we will get the final estimation of the GDP. I am confident that the country's GDP will be 7.2 per cent."

About the Centre for Policy Dialogue's criticism on the proposed national budget, Muhith uttered his oft-repeated snide epithet: 'Rubbish'.

He did not elaborate further on the policy think-tank's critical appreciation of different measures proposed in the Tk 4.0 trillion-plus budget for the next fiscal.

In his speech at the FAMS launching ceremony the finance minister said Bangladesh is no more the 'basket case' nation dubbed by the then US Secretary of State, Dr Henry Kissinger, as Bangladesh's dependency on foreign aid has dropped drastically.

In early years after the independence of Bangladesh, its debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio was about 8.0, which has now fallen to only 1.5.

"Till early 1980s, nearly 90 per cent of the national budget income had come from the foreign assistance. But the scenario started changing when the VAT was introduced in 1991 in the country," he noted.

Planning Minister Mustafa Kamal said the foreign aid the ERD mobilizes should have been economical for the country.

"When the ERD goes for negotiations, the ERD should keep the highest priority on the economic return from the aid," he added.

About the GDP growth's lower projections by some donors, Mr Kamal said they had given the data based on the reality, not on the assumptions. "So, our statistics is correct."

ICT state minister Mr Palak said they would convert 90 per cent of government service to online from the current 40 per cent by the year 2021.

Meanwhile, AMA Muhith launched the ERD's FAMS software where the state of the foreign assistance committed by different external development partners and lenders for different projects of the country, their disbursement, repayment of the debts and other information will be available.

The government ministries and agencies concerned will easily access the software for working on foreign aid.

The ERD with a support of a local private firm --genweb2-has developed the software for digitizing the foreign-aid administration.

news:financial express/7-jun-2017

Islamic banking investment stood at Tk 1770.93 billion in first quarter of 2017

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jun 07 2017 11:17 am

Total amount of investments by the country’s Islamic banks stood at Tk 1770.93 billion at the end of the first quarter of this calendar year. 

According to Bangladesh Bank’s latest report, investments, loans in conventional sense in Islamic banking sector increased by 4.82 per cent over the previous quarter.

Some Tk 1689.57 billion was invested by the Islamic banks during the immediate quarter, the last (October-December) of 2016.  

The investment of January-March period was also 18.55 per cent higher than the same period of the past year. 

The central bank review report showed that the share of total investment of Islamic banks accounted for 24.10 per cent among all the banks in the country.

It also showed that eight full-fledged Islamic banks made 95.47 per cent of the total Shariah banking investment.

The scheduled banks made the rest 4.53 per cent of the Shariah banking investment— 2.71 per cent and 1.82 per cent by their Islamic banking branches and windows respectively. 

Islami Bank Bangladesh Limited alone invested 35.58 per cent of the country's total Shariah investment in the first quarter of this calendar year.

news:financial express/7-may-2017

Tk 100, Tk 500 new notes from Jun 11

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jun 07 2017 11:03 am

Bangladesh Bank has issued cotton-paper new bank notes of Tk 100 and Tk 500 which will be available in the market from June 11, reports UNB.

The new bank notes will be cent per cent coated cotton-paper printed instead of existing paper notes, said a BB press release yesterday.

The central bank said Tk 100 note will be 140mm by 62mm in size with 4mm width and Tk 500 will be 152mm by 65mm in size with same the width having Kinetic Star Chrome Thread and containing the signature of Bangladesh Bank Governor Fazle Kabir.

The new bank notes will be issued from Bangladesh Bank's Motijheel office on June 11 and then from its other offices across the country.

The new bank notes, however, will keep unchanged its other security features like colour, design, watermark, writing of 100 Taka and 500 Taka in OVI ink, three and four dots for visually impaired people and also microprint, said the release.

news:the independent/7-jun-2017
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