
Japan will consider reversing its tightening of regulations on moneylenders to help self-employed business owners following the financial crisis, the Nikkei business daily said on Sunday. The government will launch as early as this month a study group in which ministers and other officials from related entities including the Financial Services Agency will reassess impending changes, with stricter rules on consumer lenders set to be implemented by June 2010, the Nikkei said. Japanese moneylenders such as Aiful Corp offer unsecured personal loans mainly to borrowers with weak credit. The leaders will discuss the appropriateness of limiting unsecured loans to one-third of annual income, as well as whether the government should take steps to mitigate any adverse impact of tightened regulations, the paper said. It added, citing data from the Japan Financial Services Association, that more than 50 percent of people who have outstanding loans from consumer finance companies are carrying more than one-third their annual income in such debt. Among the impending changes, the maximum interest rate is set to be lowered to 20 percent from 29.2 percent, the Nikkei said. 'We will not rule out the possibility of freezing the implementation of the tightened regulations,' the paper quoted a government source as saying.
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