(Reuters) โ New Zealand will conduct an inquiry to assess competition in the countryโs banking sector, focusing on services in rural regions, Finance Minister Nicola Willis said on Wednesday.
The decision comes after a draft report in March by the countryโs competition watchdog said New Zealandโs four major banks provided limited competition for personal banking, and that a focus on maintaining profit margins had resulted in under-investment in technology and low levels of innovation.
New Zealandโs four largest banks โ ANZ Bank New Zealand, ASB Bank, Bank of New Zealand and Westpac New Zealand โ are owned by Australiaโs โBig Fourโ banks. They make up around 85% of mortgage and other lending, and about 90% of deposits, official data showed.
โPromoting robust competition in the banking sector is vital to rebuilding the economy,โ Willis said in a statement.
Parliamentโs finance and expenditure committee will lead the inquiry and work with a committee that focuses on agriculture to determine the scope of the probe and prepare a report on rural banking.
โGrowing the rural economy is critical to rebuilding New Zealandโs economy and with farmersโ satisfaction with banking services dropping in recent years, itโs critical we better understand the role of bank competition,โ Willis said.
The finance committee will hear submissions from banks and may ask the chairpersons and chief executives to appear before the committee, she added.
New Zealandโs agricultural sector accounts for 11% of the countryโs bank loans, according to a central bank report last year.
(Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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