The Jamaican Redevelopment Foundation (JRF) has knocked the high interest-rate argument as the major rationale for the huge delinquencies on loans in failed financial institutions during the 1990s, suggesting instead that it was a case of debtors 'robbing Peter to pay Paul' or borrowers otherwise exhibiting an unwillingness to repay.
Jason Rudd, chief executive officer of JRF, the American outfit to which FINSAC sold its non-performing loan portfolio, said much of the discussion about how the debts became delinquent has focused on increasing of interest rates and compounding the interest by the legacy banks as the unilateral reason.
However, JRF has itself reviewed the accounts and found the statements being made to be largely untrue, in that only a few accounts had been affected in that regard, Rudd said in testimony last week to the commission of enquiry into the meltdown of the financial sector.
read more @ http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...business3.html
Comment