Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Nepal seeks overseas nationals' help to build up forex reserves amid economic woes By Reuters
{Current column}5People have watched
IntroductionBy Gopal SharmaKATHMANDU (Reuters) - Nepal is asking citizens living abroad to deposit funds in dome ...

By Gopal Sharma
KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Nepal is asking citizens living abroad to deposit funds in domestic banks as part of efforts to ensure the financial system has enough liquidity and to preserve foreign exchange reserves, finance minister Janardan Sharma said on Saturday.
Speaking to Reuters, he denied Nepal was facing an economic crisis despite the impact of soaring commodity prices as the tourist industry, a key source of revenues, struggles to recover after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Nepal, wedged between China and India, this month imposed curbs on luxury goods imports to rein in capital outflows. Foreign exchange reserves fell over 18% to $9.6 billion as of mid-March from mid-July - enough for around six months imports.
By depositing their savings in Nepal, overseas Nepalis would continue to "maintain their link as well as benefit from 6 to 7% interest" offered by Nepali banks, Sharma said.
Sharma said the economy did not face a crisis and Nepal's situation could not be compared with Sri Lanka. That South Asian country is facing its worst economic crisis in decades and anti-government protests.
In Nepal, remittances by overseas workers, which constitute nearly a quarter of the economy and are crucial for external payments, fell 3.0% to $5.3 billion between mid-July to mid-March, compared with a 5% increase in the same period a year earlier.
Earnings from tourism, which fell sharply after the start of the pandemic in 2020, are slowly picking up, but remain well below pre-COVID levels.
Sharma said if 100,000 Nepali nationals living abroad deposited $10,000 each in Nepali banks it could go a long way to help Nepal overcome the current liquidity constrains.
Nepal has also decided to accept $659 million in aid from the United States and about $150 million in soft loan from the World Bank, Sharma said.
"The money to be received from the United States over five years is a (non-refundable) grant," he said.
(This story corrects spelling of "minister" in first paragraph)
Tags:
Related articles
Investors pull $1.6 billion from Binance after CFTC lawsuit By Reuters
{Current column}By Elizabeth HowcroftLONDON (Reuters) - Investors withdrew $1.6 billion of cryptocurrency from crypt ...
Read moreAsian stocks mark muted start to 2024 on fresh China weakness By
{Current column}-- Asian stocks moved in a flat-to-low range in their first trading day of 2024, as sentiment was ba ...
Read moreRanking of the Best Forex Brokers in 2024
{Current column}The forex trading industry continues to thrive as a dynamic and influential arena within the global ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Dow futures fall 65 pts; debt talks, job openings, Beige Book in focus By
- 5 Stocks to Avoid While Riding the Fed Pivot
- Oil prices rebound from bruising losses; Red Sea conflict persists By
- Tesla tops analyst expectations for Q4 deliveries; Shares dip By
- India's milk imports soar as disease hits local cattle stock By Reuters
- US to provide up to $250 million in arms, equipment to Ukraine
Latest articles
-
Top 5 things to watch in markets in the week ahead By
-
Japan Nov factory output falls on weaker autos By Reuters
-
Citi's message for 2024: Buy S&P 500 pullbacks By
-
Record output, tax dodge pushes up crude exports from US Gulf Coast By Reuters
-
Tesla stock dips as analysts warn price cuts will weigh on margins By
-
S&P 500: Should You Follow the Popular Opinion About This Bull Market?