Hong Kong to tighten moneylending rules to tackle debt collector harassment
Hong Kong’s licensed moneylenders will face strict new regulations starting in August, including debt servicing ratio caps for low-income earners and a full ban on using loan referees – a move lawmakers have said should reduce harassment by debt collectors. Lawmakers also said on Saturday that the measures outlined by the Financial Services and the…
Hong Kong’s licensed moneylenders will face strict new regulations starting in August, including debt servicing ratio caps for low-income earners and a full ban on using loan referees – a move lawmakers have said should reduce harassment by debt collectors.
Lawmakers also said on Saturday that the measures outlined by the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau would help stop most illicit loans, while one legislator called for further regulations on the moneylending industry.
The bureau said in a consultation conclusions report released on Friday that the government would roll out the regulatory measures in two phases to protect the public interest.
In the first phase starting on August 1, monthly repayments for borrowers earning HK$6,000 (US$766) or less would be capped at 35 per cent of their income, while those earning between HK$6,001 and HK$12,000 would face a 40 per cent limit, according to the report.
Official data from the report showed that “excessive borrowing” had become “particularly acute among low-income earners” and foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong, with some taking out massive loans just before their employment contracts ended and then disappearing.
The document said this practice left employers facing harassment from debt collectors attempting to recover unpaid loans, highlighting significant vulnerabilities within the current moneylending framework.
