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The wage restriction problem particularly affected the relatively advanced state-
owned banks with better-qualified personnel, such as the National bank and the
Asakabank. A good proportion of qualified staff were forced to leave in the search
of better-paid opportunities; either in the private sector, or even in other countries.
In 2000, the
Government of Uzbekistan, under the pressure of international
financial institutions, particularly IMF initiated a policy of unification of the
multiple exchange rate regime. This lead to a significant depreciation of the
national currency (132% in 2000, 112% in 2001 and 34% in 2002). For large
banks (particularly NBU) that provided foreign-currency loans this automatically
resulted in deterioration of loan portfolio quality as many
of their borrowers found
themselves in difficulties to re-pay at the new exchange rates. Officials of those
banks usually denied the resultant significant portfolio deterioration since a vast
majority of those loans are in turn state-guaranteed. In principle, banks do not have
to provision against government-guaranteed loans, but debt service arrears could
nonetheless cause
liquidity problems, particularly since current practice has been
to capitalise accrued interest, thereby protecting the balance sheet but hurting
operating incomes. Accrued interest in NBU’s balance sheet, for example, grew
from USD 79 million in 1999 to USD 133 million in 2001.
The government was typically reluctant to re-pay under
the guarantee and pushed
their own banks to restructure and rollover such loans. Under the pressure of
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auditors, some of the banks in Uzbekistan published their auditor’s report
according to international accounting standards were forced to reconsider their
provisioning policy against government-guaranteed loans in the event of exchange
rate unification. Together with growing provisions on classified assets in the
remaining non-guaranteed portfolio, this has substantially affected large banks
profitability, with a return on equity in NBU 6 percent in 2001 and –20% in 2002.
According to
NBUs own estimate, non-performing loans (including those under
government guarantees) might reach around 15 percent of the total loans, if
currency unification is fully implemented.
Since 1999, domestic banks have begun to build up a portfolio of private sector
loans, granted on strictly commercial criteria, benefiting in this respect from the
institutional support provided under international financial institutions (IFI) credit
lines. However, market-based finance remains largely underdeveloped and banks
serve only a limited role in the intermediation of domestic savings. The IFI small
and medium business (SME) lines are the most important source
of funding for
credit to smaller domestic enterprises, although the government recently set up a
special budget fund to finance subsidised lending to SMEs (EBRD, 2003a).