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The NBU, a state owned bank, is the largest commercial institution in Uzbekistan.
At the end of 2001, it accounted for 75 percent of total assets, and 60 percent of
total capital of banking system. Moreover, it accounted for nearly 70 percent of
total commercial bank loans and about 85 percent of all transactions (including
trade finance) in foreign currency. Foreign investment
in the banking area not
related to the NBU is limited.
The development of commercial banking has been affected in Uzbekistan by direct
government intervention in foreign exchange and financial markets. Initially the
rule limiting enterprises to hold accounts with one bank was introduced, which
seriously undermined competition among banks. Moreover, enterprise deposits
were allowed to be withdrawn only for the payment of wages and travel expenses,
in accordance with quarterly cash plans. Both rules were abolished at a later stage
(in 1998 and 2002 correspondingly) that should improve
the competition among
banks and increase the trustworthiness of the banking sector. However, cash plans
were de-facto not completely abolished as secret “oral” orders of the Central bank
officials forced the banks to limit withdrawals by enterprises. The system of cash
planning seriously undermines confidence in the commercial banking system and
should be dismantled. Banks should be fully delegated the responsibility for their
own liquidity management. Two further reasons that induce people to stay away
from the banks, and firms to reduce bank account activity to the minimum are the
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tax-enforcing role of the banks for tax authorities and
negative real return on
savings (see Figure 1). Banks should only be required to breach customer
confidentiality where there is evidence of misconduct (such as required in
documenting possible tax evasion or money-laundering activity). Freezing up
customer funds (which often happens) should only be a last resort and any frozen
funds should be released only in connection with settlement of claims of other
creditors.
Without action to bolster confidence in the banking system,
there is a risk that
dismantling the cash/non-cash restrictions will lead to a significant drain in the
liquidity of the banking system, as enterprise managers seek to withdraw non-cash
balances from their enterprise bank accounts.
The most important commercial banks are controlled by the government and
follow the credit policies set by the Republic’s Monetary Policy Commission,
which gives priority to sectors in line with agricultural and industrial policies of
the government.
Privatisation of state-owned banks
The issue of the privatisation of state-owned banks has been discussed since the
early years of independence. However, little progress has been achieved to-date. In
1998, the government developed a strategy which encompassed the privatisation
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of five banks initially. For the largest bank targeted for privatisation (NBU), it was
initially envisaged to offer for sale only a stake of 40 percent (revised up to 49
percent in 2003), without management control being transferred to the strategic
investor. In a second bank (Asaka), the government does not plan for the
privatisation of more than 50 percent of equity. It is a precondition for the banks to
be attractive candidates for strategic investment that the government make a clear
policy statement that investors will be offered both management and board-level
control in the banks; that up to 100 percent of each bank’s shares will be offered
for sale; that the government’s post-privatisation approach to
any minority stake
will be that of a passive financial investor; and, set out in advance any specific
veto rights that the government would like to retain so long as it remains an
investor (World Bank, 2003).
The government has already prepared the legal basis for the institutional
framework to govern the bank privatisation process by creating the Bank
Privatisation Agency and preparing for the creation of an Asset Restructuring
Agency to handle the management of the assets carved out
of the bank during the
course of privatisation. The government needs to establish the mandate of the
Asset Restructuring Agency. It can either be a “parking lot” for the (mostly non-
performing) debts of state enterprises or it can be a catalyst for the restructuring
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and privatisation state-owned enterprises by actively enforcing creditor rights
(World Bank, 2003).
Problems
The banking system of Uzbekistan is characterized by a small number of relatively
sophisticated banks (the NBU and some joint venture and private banks), along
with the successors of the formal sectoral (i.e. predicated on the financing of a
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