Fiscal Nepal
First Business News Portal in English from Nepal
KATHMANDU: Nepal Rastra Bank has introduced a significant policy shift by widening the scope of priority sector lending and relaxing mandatory loan thresholds for banks and financial institutions, aiming to accelerate credit flow amid rising liquidity in the banking system.
In a circular issued nearly a month after the mid-term review of the monetary policy, the central bank has expanded the definition of priority sectors to include information technology (IT), export-oriented industries, and tourism, alongside existing sectors such as agriculture, micro-enterprises, cottage and small industries, and energy.
The move comes as banks face mounting pressure to deploy excess liquidity. By incorporating IT, tourism, and domestic raw material-based export industries into the priority category, the central bank seeks to stimulate lending in high-growth and foreign exchange-earning sectors critical to Nepal’s economic transformation.
Previously, development banks and finance companies were already mandated to invest in tourism. The updated provision now aligns commercial banks under a broader, more flexible framework.
The central bank has also recalibrated mandatory lending ratios, providing relief to banks that have struggled to meet earlier thresholds and faced penalties.
Importantly, banks exceeding the 10 percent agricultural lending threshold will be allowed to count the excess toward other priority sectors, introducing operational flexibility.
From mid-January 2027, banks must ensure that at least 20 percent of their total loan portfolio is directed toward priority sectors, now defined as:
Loan caps have also been specified:
This restructuring is expected to reduce compliance pressure and minimize penalties that banks had been incurring for failing to meet rigid thresholds. Notably, even global lenders like Standard Chartered Bank had previously faced regulatory fines under the older framework.
In a parallel policy update, the central bank has amended the “Unified Directive, 2025” for infrastructure development banks, extending the deadline for loan sale, purchase, and takeover provisions until mid-July 2028 (Asar-end 2085 BS).
Under the revised rules:
Previously, such provisions were limited to the first four years of a bank’s operation. The new timeline introduces clarity and extends operational flexibility.
The policy is widely viewed as a targeted intervention to:
Sectors such as hydropower, roads, and water resources—where long-term financing remains a structural challenge—are expected to benefit from improved credit mobility and risk-sharing mechanisms.
The central bank’s latest measures signal a calibrated shift toward a more flexible and growth-oriented credit policy framework, aligning financial sector regulation with Nepal’s evolving economic priorities.
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