Banks have deferred the repayments of one in fourteen
mortgages totalling more than $150 billion to assist
Australians who can't make payments due to the COVID-19
crisis.
The Australian Banking Association last week released
new figures which showed 429,000 mortgages had been
deferred totalling $153.5 billion. The figures take the
total number of loans deferred to 703,000, worth a value
of $211 billion.
Banks have also hired 1500 new staff and redeployed over
2200 staff to frontline areas such as call centres to
help meet the historic surge in demand for support over
the last few months.
Australian Banking Association CEO Anna Bligh said that
banks stood shoulder to shoulder with Australians who
were suffering as a result of the COVID-19 health and
economic crisis.
"Banks are here to support customers throughout the
crisis and help the economy on the other side as we
recover from the devastating effects of this pandemic,"
Ms Bligh said.
"Since this crisis started banks have deferred the
mortgage repayments of 429,000 Australian families or a
staggering one in fourteen of all home loans.
"Australian families who are financially affected by
this crisis have had the breathing space they need with
a six month deferral on their home loan repayment while
they chart a path through to the other side of this
downturn," she said.