Cambodia's Finance Sector Lends Hand to Nation's Needy
PR86804
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, Nov. 23, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/--
With Cambodians facing the ongoing challenges of COVID-19 and the devastation
of recent flooding across the country, the Kingdom's banking and finance
institutions (BFIs) are extending a helping hand in difficult times, including
the Association of Banks in Cambodia.
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Since the beginning of 2020, Cambodia's BFIs have raised more than US$500,000
in donations for health, sanitary and food supplies to support vulnerable
communities.
"Banking and finance are 'people businesses' at their heart and are driven by
the ambition of helping people succeed and prosper through formal financial
services. But this ambition clearly extends to helping people in need in any
way we can," says Dr. In Channy, Chairman of the Association of Banks in
Cambodia (ABC).
According to a recent Association survey, more than half of Cambodia's BFIs
have embedded social impact in their core mission statements, with several
committing a fixed percentage of revenue to support social causes related to
the environment, education, healthcare and financial inclusion.
"MFIs in particular have a special place in post-war Cambodian society and the
vast majority of our members put social impact at the heart of their
operations," explains Cambodia Microfinance Association (CMA) Chairman, Mr. Kea
Borann. "But it is about more than charitable donations and volunteer work,
although those are important, and extends to the way the MFIs prioritize their
customers' wellbeing in everything they do."
"During the COVID-19 pandemic, we have redoubled efforts to help clients by
restructuring more than 270,000 loans valued at over 3 billion dollars with
more work ongoing as the extent of the pandemic and the effects on the economy
become clearer," he says.
"We are also working with our members to prepare for legislation currently
being drafted that will embed client protection in Cambodian law, a move we
strongly endorse," says Mr. Kea, noting that Cambodia's 9 leading MFIs and
banks are already certified by the Smart Client Protection Principles, the
global body that certifies microfinance institutions' adherence to client
safeguarding principles.
Beyond tightening up legislation, the associations and the National Bank
Cambodia (NBC) have been accelerating efforts to improve financial literacy and
inclusion in the Kingdom with an ambitious campaign explaining the basics of
sustainable borrowing and lending.
The campaign will include social and traditional media as well as targeted
workshops for SMEs, female entrepreneurs and agriculture businesses to improve
the quality of borrowing among traditionally 'underbanked' segments of the
population.
"Our industry is in a state of almost constant evolution as we face the
challenges of the pandemic as well as the opportunities of an increasingly
diversified economy where digital adoption is changing the way everyone does
business," says Dr. In Channy. "The finance sector is committed to ensuring
this evolution continues, putting our customers at the centre of everything we
do through improved protections and better financial education to help them
withstand the global economic downturn brought on by the coronavirus pandemic,"
he adds.
SOURCE Association of Banks in Cambodia
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Caption: A microfinance loan officer visits a farmer in a rice field in Cambodia
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