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Chief adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus.

Chief adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus on Saturday stressed the need for establishing a dedicated ‘Microcredit Bank’ to enable microcredit to play a more significant role within the formal banking system, moving beyond its current NGO-style framework.

‘We have to think about something new — establishment of Microcredit Bank — as the success of microcredit reached a new height,’ he said.


Professor Yunus said microcredit is now seen as an NGO, and to become a full-fledged bank, it is necessary to have a transition from NGO to bank. ‘Clearly, it will have to be a bank, and we need a separate banking law,’ he said.

Professor Yunus said currently a microcredit organisation can collect deposits from its members only and this needs to be expanded to give a real shape as a bank.

Highlighting the importance of microcredit, he laid emphasis on giving more focus on the future banking system based on trust, stressing that it would be the future-oriented real baking system.

‘It’s the appropriate time to talk about the issue,’ he said, adding that the banks, which were considered as the real banks have disappeared today with looting public money, but the microcredit exists with a transparent base.

Stressing the need for paying attention to real banks, Professor Yunus said they saw people busy with fake banks.

The chief adviser made the remarks while inaugurating the Microcredit Regulatory Authority building in the city’s Agargaon area. ‘I feel good to be here today and meet the old friends,’ Prof Yunus said.

Created in 1976 in Bangladesh, the Grameen Bank uses microcredit to fight against poverty.

By creating a banking system based on trust and creativity, Professor Yunus breathed new life into traditional banking mechanisms.

Finance adviser Salehuddin Ahmed, chief adviser’s special assistant Anisuzzaman Chowdhury, Bangladesh Bank governor Ahsan H Mansur, executive vice-chairman of Microcredit Regulatory Authority Professor Mohammed Helal Uddin and secretary of Financial Institutions Division Nazma Mobarek, among others, spoke at the event.

To bring Non-government Microfinance Institutions under a regulatory framework, the government of Bangladesh enacted Microcredit Regulatory Authority Act, 2006 (Act no. 32 of 2006) on July 2006 with effect from August 27, 2006.

Under this Act, the government established the Microcredit Regulatory Authority with a view to ensuring transparency and accountability of microcredit activities of the NGO-MFIs in the country.

The Authority is empowered and responsible to implement the said act and to bring the microcredit sector of the country under a full-fledged regulatory framework.