Government set to boost bank lending

Thu Oct 30, 2008 4:51am GMT
 
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LONDON (Reuters) - The government will announce plans to boost bank lending to small businesses on Thursday that could include the European Investment Bank shouldering more risk.

"Having recapitalised the banks, we want to ensure that they will extend availability of credit at competitive prices," Prime Minister Gordon Brown told parliament. "Further announcements will be made tomorrow when we have a meeting with the banks."

Britain has called on the EIB, the European Union's public lending arm, to take on more of its partner commercial banks' risk for lending to small businesses to help them withstand the global credit crunch.

Under the EIB's global loans programme, the lender matches cash from intermediary banks for the finance of small or medium-scale business investment projects but the risk remains with the commercial bank.

(Reporting by Matt Falloon, editing by Kate Kelland and Stephen Nisbet)

 
A share trader is pictured behind a mock one dollar bill and a mock 500 Euro note symbolizing a consumer credit note, at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt, December 18, 2008. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Credit headwind

News headlines speak of recovery, but financing is still a big problem in Germany. The dearth of credit to tide firms over is frustrating policymakers, who are blaming reluctant banks and there is little agreement on how best to increase lending flows.  Full Article 

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