DAILY NEWS Reporter
CREDIT
to private sector recovered to 2.6 per cent in the year to May from 0.8
per cent in the preceding month with significant improvement registered
in the manufacturing sector.
The
Bank of Tanzania (BoT) monthly economic review for June shows that
credit extension to manufacturing sector rose to 11.4 per cent from 10.8
per cent in the year to April.
“In
terms of shares to outstanding credit to the private sector, personal
and trade activities continued to account for the largest share at 27.3
per cent and 20.6 per cent respectively,” stated the report.
BoT
said the reclassification of salaried loans that previously were
considered as part of loans to other services in favour of health and
education partly explains observed higher growth in personal loans.
The
total domestic credit by the banking system comprising credit to the
government and private sector contracted by 7.3 per cent compared with a
decline of 2.5 per cent in April and growth of 1.2 per cent in the
corresponding period last year.
The
shrinkage was driven by decrease in credit to the government from the
banking system, with much of the decline from government transactions
with the central bank following decrease in short term advances to the
government and relative increase in government deposits at the BoT.
Increase
in government deposits partly arose from improvement in government
revenue collections and realisation of external non-concessional loans.
Meanwhile,
government continued to borrow from commercial banks through issuance
of government securities though at a decreasing rate.
Net
government borrowing from commercial banks grew by 5.7 per cent,
compared with 14.9 per cent and 28.5 per cent in year to April and last
May, respectively.
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