Karachi: The State Bank of Pakistan governor on Friday said overseas Pakistanis were increasingly using informal channels to send remittances to the country.
"We are seeing that the use of formal channels for sending money (by expatriates) is not growing as much as the use of informal channels," Reza Baqir said while addressing the fourth annual banking award, the media reported on Saturday.
"The reasons for this may be the comparatively higher cost of sending money (through formal channels) and the questions asked (by banks) from the senders," he added.
The central bank chief had recently told the federal cabinet that overseas Pakistanis were reluctant to provide additional information about themselves to banks fearing that their data, which would be shared with the Federal Bureau of Revenue (FBR) in line with the Financial Action Task Force's {FATF) recommendations, could be 'misused'.
Bankers and experts have estimated that receipt of remittances through illegal channels stood at around $8 billion a year.
Pakistan received $9.3 billion in the first five months (July-November) of the current fiscal year through legal channels.
Last year, the government had launched a crackdown on the operators of the illegal hundi and hawala money transfer systems and ran a campaign to encourage the use of legal channels like banks.
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Speaking at the ceremony, the SBP governor noted that banks were heavily investing in government sovereign papers, treasury bills and Pakistan Investment Bonds (PIBs).
He urged banks to lend more to the private sector to boost economic growth.
"Banks should lend more as they have become risk averters following the incorporation of amendments to the money laundering and terror financing rules," he added.
"We have made significant improvement in FATF compliance…banks are with us (in the FATF journey)."