VOA标准英语2010年-African Banks Decrease Lending to Priv(在线收听) |
In the early stages of the global recession, many African bankers and analysts dismissed the decline as a western issue. Their assumptions were based on the fact that most African financial institutions, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, were not part of the larger network of the global financial structure. A few others cautiously monitored it. A few banks in developing countries like South Africa have successfully integrated into the global financial system, but even so, the impact was expected to be minimal or non-existent. But with time, many African bank executives and economic analysts were proven wrong in their initial assessments. They acknowledge that they had failed to take into consideration the fact that in the past decade African banks have been working hard to be integrated into the international financial system. Integration has its economic benefits, but it has also made the continent more susceptible to the ebbs and flows of global financial institutions. Most African countries were relatively “insulated” from the shock of the financial collapse “because African banks don’t deal in these derivatives and credit default swaps,” says Professor Shantayanan Devarajan, the chief economist of the World Bank's Africa Region. The slowdown has made it hard for businesses to service existing loans and access new ones. Most importantly however, long-term depositors like the Rwanda Social Security Fund are undertaking major real estate investments. This requires huge amounts of cash on hand to complete projects, which explains fewer deposits and huge withdrawals of millions of francs -- the same money that a commercial bank often uses as rotating funds. Jack Kayonga is the director of the Rwanda Development Bank. Even though he acknowledges the effects the global crisis has had on local banks, he downplays the impact on the private sector specifically the real estate market “There is still room to grow” He says.
|
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/1/90725.html |