The geographical outreach of
financial services is increasing but at a slow pace, despite the fast
increasing number of banks and financial institutions.
One branch of a bank in the
country has been serving around 15,000 adults, according to the International
Monetary Fund's (IMF) third annual Financial Access Survey released yesterday.
"Per 100,000 adults had
geographical outreach to 6.67 bank branches in 2011, from 4.59 branches in
2010, said the survey that has revealed that in Nepal there were some 8.90 bank
branches per 1,000-sq-km in 2011 from only 6.12 branches a year ago.
The total number of bank and
financial institutions licensed by the central bank dropped to 266 by mid-July
2012 from 272 in mid-July 2011, according to the central bank data.
The Financial Access Survey also
revealed that there are some 8.90 ATMs per 1,000-sq-km, whereas in 2010 there
were only 6.67 ATMs per 1,000-sq-km.
The Financial Access Survey is
the sole global supply-side source of comparable geographic and demographic
data on access to and usage of basic consumer financial services by households
and enterprises across the world.
Similarly, use of financial
services like outstanding deposits with banks and loans from banks — per cent
of gross domestic production (GDP) — has also increased, though at a slower
pace.
"Outstanding loans from
banks stood at 45.06 per cent of the GDP in 2011 from 39.80 per cent of the GDP
a year back," the survey revealed, adding that the outstanding deposit
with banks has increased to 58.67 per cent of GDP in 2011 from 53.83 per cent
of GDP in 2010.
The survey is also the only
source of data covering all five categories of the Basic Set of Financial
Inclusion Indicators endorsed by G-20 leaders at the Los Cabos Summit in June
2012, according to the IMF.
The 2012 Financial Access Survey
was conducted in collaboration with the Access to Finance Advisory Services of
the International Finance Corporation, and the Consultative Group to Assist the
Poor, whereas
the Netherlands' Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and the Australian Agency for International Development
provided financial support.
The IMF also claimed that the
2012 survey was enhanced to include time series on basic consumer financial
access indicators covering credit unions, financial cooperatives and
microfinance institutions, and to separately identify small and medium
enterprises, households, life insurance and non-life insurance.
The 2012 round has a response
rate of over 93 per cent with 182 reporting jurisdictions, of which 27 are
first-time reporters. It represents a 35 per cent increase in country coverage
relative to the 2011 round, which covered 135 reporting jurisdictions.
The survey database contains
annual data and metadata for a total of 187 jurisdictions, including all G-20
economies, covering an eight-year period (2004-2011), and totalling more than
40,000 time series.
No comments:
Post a Comment