Title: Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management
1Tsinghua University School of Economics and
Management
- Lecture 2008/2
- A Historical Introduction to Governance
- and Leadership in Regulatory Environment
- Andrew Sheng
- Adjunct Professor
- 15 March 2008
2Preliminary Thoughts
- ??????????,??????,?????,??????,????????.
- ???????,???,???,???,????
- How different is this from an Adaptive,
Learning, Evolving Socialist Economy? - Chinese Development by Opening Up, Learning,
Adapting, Competing, Cooperating is truly
Complexity Economics! - Regulation has a role in Complexity Economics
because Regulator is Reflexive and has major role
in shaping social behaviour in accordance with
policy objectives!!
3Content
- Historical Introduction to Governance
- I. Definition of Finance, Regulation and
Governance - II. Methodology From Neo-Classical Economics to
New Institutional Economics - III. Putting Regulation and Governance in a
Historical and Institutional Context - Leadership, Decision-making and Team-work
- Routine work is where all decisions are already
made in the work-process - If you work routinely, you do not learn how to
work and respond to environmental change - In this session, we draw on Military History and
Modern Management to learn how to think
strategically and act tactically - All work is about Management!
4Malcolm Sparrow (?????????) ????
- ???????,???,?????
- ????,???? - ??.
- ?????????,???? ???
- ???????,???????????? ???,??????????????,?? ????
????????????????? ?????? - ?????????,????,????
5I. Definition of Finance, Regulation and
Governance
- Finance is a derivative of the real sector.
- Financial market is a system to delineate, trade
and protect property rights. - Institutions include any form of constraint that
human beings devise to shape human interaction.
Therefore, an essential part of the functioning
of institutions is the costliness of ascertaining
violations and the severity of punishment. North
(2005) pg 4 - Hence, regulation and finance are the tools of
governance.
6An Economy is a Social Institution - it must have
Governance
- Organizations..are groups of individuals bound by
some common purpose to achieve objectives.
Modeling organizations is analyzing governance
structures, skills, and how learning by doing
will determine the organizations success over
timeNorth (2005) pg 5 - Institutions affect the performance of the
economy by their effect on the costs of exchange
and production. The major role of institutions
in a society is to reduce uncertainty by
establishing a stable (but not necessarily
efficient) structure to human interaction. - Every social unit has its own Governance
- Family - patrilineal or matrilineal rules
????????? - Clan, Club or Group - social rules ????
- Enterprise - Corporate Constitution ????and
Governance - Government - Public Governance, Law and
Enforcement - Market - market rules
7Differences in Approach to Governance
- Anglo-Saxon - Village Community evolved Common
Law ???. Manorial system prevented
centralization of power in monarch (Magna Carta)
by ensuring power of taxation and individual
property rights are protected via judiciary and
parliament. Organization Structure at point of
time - England-European Continental competition created
innovation via maritime/commercial power -
external conquest was driven by merchants that
generated market resources to reinforce
technological advance Dutch East India Company,
British East India Company. - Japanese late-Tokugawa period ??????had already
established competing fiefdoms (daimyos) that
were structured along commercial lines.
Shogashoshas (industrial groups) led way for
military-industrial complex. - Chinas land-based agrarian bureaucratic
organization structure was inward looking???,
self-satisfied, rigid and did not use market
forces to innovate scientifically and
organizationally to meet Western competition and
invasion ????.
8Diversity and Path Dependence of Governance Modes
- Because Society is an Institution, it has an
Architecture, which can be has different shapes. - Social Institutions are path-dependent. They are
formed and shaped by History, Culture, Geography,
Environment and past experience. - Man shapes history, but history and mega-trends
also shape Man and Society. - Hence, the need to understand Macro-History.
9II. From Neo-classical Economics ?????? to New
Institutional Economics
10Western Theory vs. Chinese Pragmatism
- Western Intellectual Tradition is Deductive ?? -
use basic principles to evolve a theoretical
framework of the real world. - Chinese Intellectual Tradition is Inductive ?? -
use real world experience and history to guide
behaviour. - Western thinking is bold and encourages grand
thinking, but is faulty when the assumptions and
deductions are wrong. - Chinese Pragmatism is cautious, but tends to be
less open, because the thinking is path dependent
(bound by history and experience), less willing
to experiment. - Creativity comes from the integration of two or
more different intellectual traditions. We must
use Western (Scientific) tools to analyze Chinese
history, and we must use Chinese pragmatism
???????to evaluate Western theory.
11Institutional Economics Path Dependency ???? ????
- ??????????,??????,?????,??????,????????.
- Economic change depends largely on adaptive
efficiency - a societys effectiveness in
creating institutions that are productive,
stable, fair, broadly accepted and responsive to
political and economic feedback. Douglass North
(2005) - ???????,???,???,???,????
- ????,????,?????
- The key to understanding modern social
development is understanding the transition from
limited to open social access orders, which only
a handful of societies have managed since WWII,
Douglass North, Wallis and Weingast, 2006
12Game Theory and Chinese Thinking
- Social Interaction is all about game theory - how
two or more persons interact and react to each
other - Game Theory involves co-operation (join
institution) or defection (join another competing
institution) ?? - ????,?????
- In other words, the most important social
decision is to join or cooperate I.e. obey
rules or defect dont comply and join
opposition. - How and why and under what conditions, market
participants join or co-operate has not only
participant consequences, but also social
consequences ?? - Tragedy of the Commons ??????- Garrett Harding,
1968, on social cooperation or social destruction
and damage of public good ???.
13Policy is interplay between Personality and
Institution
- Political observers assume that policy is
formulated by few leaders, ignoring the role of
institutions. .Susan Shirk - The way in which beliefs?institutions?organization
s?policies?outcomes evolves has led to
unparalleled economic well-being and to endless
disasters and human misery. North 2005 pg 155 - In a Coasian world the players would always
choose that policy that maximized aggregate
well-being with compensation for any losersbut
the real transaction costs are frequently
prohibitive reflecting deep-seated beliefs and
prejudices that translate into such prohibitive
transaction costs. 156 - Altering the performance of an economy for the
better takes time - a lot longer than the time
horizon of the politician who must approve such
changes. In the short run the reform may
necessitate alterations that leave some of the
players worse off, and if they have access to the
political process they may very well derail the
reform. 157
14Innovation, Imitation and Knowledge Organizations
in Economic Development
- Schumpeter ???argues the key role of
Entrepreneur in Creative Destruction. ????? - However, value creation or superior performance
(company, economy, nation) depends on innovation
and organization - specifically how institutions
organize knowledge and apply them for commercial,
strategic or national advantage (Joel Mokyr, 2000
and 2002), e.g. venture capital, private equity,
technology parks. - The policies required to initiate a transition
from a low-income equilibrium to a state of rapid
growth may be qualitatively different from those
required to re-ignite growth for a middle-income
country Rodrik (2003) - It is not always necessary to create replicas of
Western-style state legal institutions from
scratch it may be possible to work with such
alternative institutions as are available, and
build on them. Avinash Dixit (2004)
15Key Elements of Social Change
- Stock ??- Organization Structure at point of time
- Flow ?? - Process of Change, shaped by internal
and external factors. - Internal Factors - Process change, organizational
re-structuring, power struggle, corruption,
incompetence and policy mistakes. - External Factors - Rebellion, External Invasion,
Natural Disasters, Competition, Changes in Market - To be sustainable, organization structure must be
flexible and maneuverable against both internal
and external forces.
16Social Change is like a path-dependent Decision
Tree - society can go down different paths
depending on historical decisions
Fig. The Expansion Process of an Epidemic
17???????????
- ???? Incentive Structure ? ?????????,?????.???,?,
??? ??? - ???? Principal-Agent Problem - ????
- ????? Information Asymmetry - ?????????,??????,
????,?????,?????????-??/?? - ??? - ???? ?????,???
- ???? - ???,???
- ???????-??????
18III. Chinese Macro-history and Governance????
????????????
19Ray Huang China - A Macro-History(????????)
- As the world enters the modern era, most
countries under internal and external pressure
need to reconstruct themselves by substituting
the mode of governance ????rooted in agrarian
experience with a new set of rules based on
commerce. Since commercial distribution focuses
on exchange, all economic and social components
within the society must accordingly be made
interchangeable before the law. - This is easier said than done. The renewal
process could affect the top and bottom layers,
and inevitably it is necessary to recondition the
institutional links between them. Comprehensive
destruction is often the order and it may take
decades to bring the work to completion (Preface
to the Turn of the Century Edition, xiii)
20Geography shapes Governance
- Three Geopolitical Threats - Three Kingdoms
- Loess-based Central Plains, watered by Yellow
River, that carries 46 silt, vs.. 12 for
Amazon. Hence, continual flooding that required
centralized authority needed upriver to build
dikes and irrigation to prevent flooding - Monsoon climate, with rain concentrated in 3
months, from Han to end of dynasty of 2117 years,
1,621 recorded floods and 1,392 droughts. Hence,
water management and flood control also required
central authority - Foreign Invasion - Long border with Huns ??and
Tibetan ??nomads required national defense
capability, e.g. Great Wall, that also required
central authority - Wei ?, the Northern Central Plain Shu ?, the
landlocked rice bowl, and Wu ?, the Coastal water
kingdom.
21Stylized Chinese Imperial Organization Chart
- Qin had 36 commanderies - subdivided into towns
and villages - Han divided into half commanderies and half
hereditary lordships, governed by royal relatives
22Stylized Four Level Imperial Organization
ChartFrom Center down to Village
- Each Level Structure basically the same
- Prone to split if too much power delegated from
center to lower levels - Historical swing from centralization to
decentralization caused by homogenous unitary
top-down structure
23The Agrarian Bureaucratic System was fiscally and
financially unmanageable.
- By Qin Dynasty (221- BC), China was already
divided into 36 commanderies, each with civil
governor, military commander, and a
censor-in-chief (35). - China is the only nation in the world that has on
record permitted the central government to tax
the individual peasant household from the
pre-Christian era to the twentieth century. - Taxation was on land-tax, plus services in kind
for communal labor or military conscription,
calculated at one-thirtieth of land yield (3.3). - By Han Dynasty, the Chinese emperor had to rule
over 60 million people with 130,000 bureaucrats
(2.1). - There was a natural tendency for the wealthier
and more powerful to displace the poorer and
weaker. The government, unable to implement any
plan of progressive taxation, would first face
the loss of revenue, and then the effort to
provide relief to the poor would also suffer. - China achieved imperial unification ????well
ahead of its time local customs did not have an
opportunity to develop and mature. The pattern
of small holdings put any meaningful legal
service beyond the reach of the villagers. Thus
rarely were cases of indebtedness, mortgage,
foreclosure, and dispossession carried out under
the orderly supervision of the law. As a rule,
it was the local ruffians who took matters into
their own hands, conveniently under the direction
of the rural wealthy. (63)
24Mathematically Manageability - the evolution of
Financial and Fiscal Capability
- A system of monetary management distinguished by
the following three conditions- - Wide extension of credit
- Impersonal management and
- Pooling of service facilities
- Monetary Management must extend to embrace the
entire national economy including the agrarian
sector no less than industry and commerce. A
competent judiciary system is necessary to back
it up, so that the interchangeability of value
can be clarified and enforced and the accumulated
wealth can be piled steadily higher. - Implementing these conditions, a capitalist
country permits private enterprise to play a
dominant role private capital therefore
exercises a disproportionately wider influence
over public life. With this price paid, the
public frees itself from unnecessary governmental
regulation and gives free rein to economic forces
so that competition can achieve the greatest
efficiency. Socialism modifies the system with
strong public participation and control (266).
25What is Missing? Property Rights Infrastructure
- Just like China has succeeded in strengthening
growth through physical infrastructure, a
property rights infrastructure is the missing
part in Ray Huangs middle superstructure - Accurate and Accessible Information -
Transparency - Reliable Property Registry (not easily forged)
- Independent Judiciary to adjudicate property
disputes - Independent Regulators to enforce laws
- Market oriented financial intermediaries and
supporting institutions to facilitate transfer of
(mathematically manageable) property rights - Property Rights Infrastructure helps to define,
delineate, transfer and protect property rights
26Conclusion and Implication
- Chinese history has great lessons for governance
in economic development. - Closed systems become rigid and
obsolete/non-competitive. Very often, old systems
collapse (Ming) and need new outside leaders
(Qing) to break deadlock. - Governance has both cost and benefit. The cost
is financed through taxation. If benefits of
governance are less than costs, then society
fragments or breaks down. - Governance through moral values ????and penal
code ??alone is insufficient to prevent
corruption and administrative abuses????. - We need to scientifically analyze institutional
behaviors and examine modern practices to
consider how best to regulate and govern
effectively to achieve social goals of growth,
prosperity, justice and harmony.
27????
- ??????,??????, ?????, ?????, ??????,???????
- --- ???? ????
- It is standards and regulation that enable man to
be free from faults it is elaborate preparations
that free him from difficulties it is worry
about the detail that ensures prudence it is
management of great affairs that cultivates
wisdom it is courage of enforcement that rids
crime it is caring for the small people that
wins public support. - ??????,???????,????????????,????? --- ?????
- A lawless country leads to chaos, whereas an
inflexible law leads to irrational decisions.
Laws must change with the times.
28Leadership is at all levelsof decision-making
- Malcolm Sparrow
- Pick Important Problems, Fix Them and Tell
Everyone! - Chinese Saying
- Seek Truth from Facts ????
- Training is about feeding you facts and
information - Education is to make you think for yourself
- In life, it is not always the answer that is
important, but asking the right question. - What is the right question?
29Skills of decision-making are learnt, not
inherited
- No one likes to make decisions, but we have to!
- No decision is still a decision!
- Sometimes not a bad thing to wait, but it must be
a conscious decision to wait, not wait because
you do not want to make a decision i.e.
procrastination\ - Most unhelpful decision is Noted - ???? What
does the boss mean? - We all make mistakes! ????
- Better that we learn from our mistakes, than
continuing making them.
30Communication is best when it covers both Context
and Detail
- Big Picture if you only talk about Big Issues,
large policies, no one understands you - Too much detail if you only understand the
detail, you cannot see the wood from the trees - The best way to communicate is when you present
both a coherent story, within the context of what
your audience appreciates, with enough detail to
back up to Reality - Remember in front of the TV Camera or the
Minister, you have only five minutes to make your
case - Execution is easy when message is simple - no
room for confusion. ????.
31Decision-making is a cycle
- Decision cycle is
- Information Gathering ??
- Analysis ??
- Weighing up the options - risks vs. returns
- Focus and Prioritize
- Linear Programming (Constrained decisions)
- Decision ??
- Acting on Decision ??
- Assessing the results ??
- Feedback and Review Decision
32Learning to Learn - Stiglitz
- The overwhelming variety and complexity of human
societies requires the localization of knowledge - Practical know-how is largely tacit knowledge
that needs to be learned by horizontal methods of
twinning, apprenticeship, and seconding, and - Each society, through its knowledge institutions,
should take the active role ("in the driver's
seat") in the local learning process. - One size of "clothing" does not fit all
societies, a society learns to be a "tailor"
partly by apprenticeship. - A society should be its own "tailor" to find the
best fit.
33Montgomery of Alamein on Leadership My Doctrine
of Command
- Leadership is the capacity and the will to rally
men and women to a common purpose, and the
character which inspires confidence.the good
leader will first study the problem and will then
grapple with it - Malcolm Sparrow Pick Important Problems, Fix
them and Tell Everyone! - The art of command lies in understanding that no
two situations are ever the same each must be
tackled as a wholly new problem to which there
will be a wholly new answer. - Here lies a man who died of exhaustion brought
about by pre-occupation with detail. He never
had the time to think because he was always
reading papers. He saw every tree, but never the
whole wood.
34Think Strategically, Act Tactically
- Life is a game of infinite permutations
combinations - All real-life situations are like a game, in
which your decisions affect others, and their
decisions affect your action or non-action - Decisions depend on the quality of information,
what information you have on your own situation
and resources, and those of others in the game - You always act under conditions of uncertainty
- Managing is all about learning to make these
decisions under uncertainty risk - Therefore we can learn from how military history
deals with decision-making under uncertainty - Instead of war, think about competition.
35Think Laterally - the Past is Not Necessarily
Predictor of Future
- Key Trends
- Lineal - Past is good predictor of Future
- Algebraic - Trend follows a formula, but which
formula? - Random - too many different changes
- Chaotic - Impossible to predict, but may have a
pattern. - Reflexive - Heisenberg Principle - environment
affects decision-maker and your decisions affect
environment. - Risk can be measured. Uncertainty cannot be
measured. - Prepare for all contingencies.
36Sun-zi Art of War, 403-221 BCStrategic
Calculations
- In any game, assessing who wins or loses depends
on five factors - ? Tao the Way Values
- ? Heaven/Climate - Timing
- ? Earth/Terrain Environment and Conditions
- ? Generalship - Command
- ? Law/Discipline/Method
- Incentive Structure
- How do we interpret this in modern terms?
37Questions to ask in assessing winning side
- Which side has the moral right (Tao or values)?
- Which side has the abler leader?
- Which side has the better timing and terrain
home or away? - Which side has superior strength in terms of
manpower and resources? - Which side is better trained?
- Which side has clearer rewards and punishment
clear incentive structure?
38Know yourself and know the competition...
- He who knows the enemy and himself
- will never be at risk in a hundred battles
- ????
- He who does not know the enemy but knows himself
- will sometimes win and sometimes lose
- He who knows neither the enemy nor himself will
be at risk in every battle - Sun-zi.
39Strategy is the art of distributing and applying
military means to fulfill the ends of
policy.Liddell Hart
- Deterrent strategy The supreme act of war is to
subdue the enemy without fightingSun-zi - Offensive strategy If you dont fight, you cant
win and if you cant win, you lose.Barrie James,
Business War Games, 1984 - Defensive strategy Defense is the stronger form
of war.Carl von Clausewitz - Retreat - when you cant win. ????
- Strategy is only as good as Execution!
40Reliable, Timely Information is a Market
Fundamental
- Raw data is useless without classification and
analysis - Information Classified Data
- Knowledge Analyzed Information
- Wisdom Knowledge with judgment and experience
- Computers can speed up classification and
analysis - But you still need people to make the judgments
- Regulators have tons of data which we do not
analyze!!
41Intelligence for a Regulator Comes from Many
Sources
- Regulatory Reports (could be wrong)
- Field Inspection Reports (to confirm off-site
reports) - Discussions with auditors and management (check
from the regulatee directly) - Media reports (no smoke without fire)
- Consumer complaints (indicator of bad management)
- Competitors complaints
- Whistle-blowers or insider complaints
- But all intelligence is useless if Regulators do
not know how to analyze such information.
42The Changing Organization
- Traditional Organization rigid top-down
structure of departments, reporting lines, set
procedures - Outcome silos of staff that do not talk to each
other organization unable to respond to market
changes evolution of fiefdoms which engender
internal conflicts rather than problem solving - Knowledge Organism dynamic processes that
respond quickly to market changes flexible and
ever-evolving - Assisted by Web-based technology share
information and work as a team to solve common
problems
43Why are Silos Problematic?
- Rigid Thinking Management that is part of the
problem cannot be part of the solution - Information that is necessary for solution not
available in silo in most problems, you need
new information or new way to think about problem
in order to solve it. A silo thinks as
follows- - We know all the problems and all the solutions -
the new guy is only trying to impress us - New solutions are not invented here, therefore it
cannot be right - New solutions prove that we are wrong, therefore
we must be against it, even if it is right - We will lose our jobs if new thinking or process
comes (self-interest) - If costs us too much to try and learn new tricks
- Silos get caught up in their process and forget
what their objective is. Bureaucraticism is
order for orders sake, forgetting that order is
to serve the people.
44The Four Philosophies of Managing
Managing by Control
Managing through Coordination
Managing through Web Energizing structure
Allocation
set
set
set
set
hub
web
set
chain
In the set, managers look it over - they allocate.
In the chain, managers lay it on - they control.
In the hub, managers draw it in, they
coordinate.
In the web, managers link it all, they energize.
45Paper-based Organization
- File sequential passing of information, giving
history of case, moving up and down change of
command Red tape paper database - Outcome staff assumes that all information is
in file. Tendency not to think out of the box. - Wait for the boss to decide or wait for next
piece of information - Delays not able to respond to environmental
changes quickly - File can only be handled by one person at a time
- Paper-based systems easily become silos.
46Web-based Organization
- File dynamic simultaneous exchange of
information, enabling all staff to access global
information and knowledge - Outcome staff overloaded with information
demands staff who know how to sort out important
from urgent - Faster process, but Delays and lack of due to
Confusion not sure who is responsible, since
everyone on cc list - Full use of ICT technology and tools
- Requires staff to make critical judgment on
cut-off for decision-making - but the more
broad-based the judgment of staff, the more
flexible and responsive functional
maneuverability).
47From Organization to OrganismAndrew Fenning J
Walter Thompsom
- One of the consequences of the Information Age
is an ever-greater reliance on people and their
unique skills of creativity, intuition, judgment
and decision taking. - We must transcend the silos, break the shackles
that restrict our movement, enfranchise our
employees. - Fear of failure is the greatest destructive
agent in our midst. That and paralyzing
conformity.
48Example How SFC implements Corporate Plan
- Six Strategic Initiatives
- Implementation of New Securities Law
- Implement Financial Infrastructure Blueprint
- Improve Corporate Governance
- Facilitate HK market development
- Strengthen Mainland-HKSAR cooperation
- Monitor industry changes
- Key to success is people - people make the
difference
49Identify Important Problems...
- Poor Corporate Governance - change law and
clarify role of regulators - Introduce Dual Filing
- Push for Greater Transparency and new Listing
Rules - Outmoded Intermediary Structure - identify scale
of problems (overcrowded market, margin
financing, obsolete paper-based infrastructure,
etc) - Demutualize Stock Exchange
- Fix problem brokers
- Outmoded processes - change through technology,
speed up licensing and enforcement - Tell everyone - better investor education,
corporate communications and staff communications
50Illustration Risk-based Regulatory Approach
- Tao
- Are our policy objectives clear?
- Heaven
- Do we know what risks the industry is facing?
- How good is our data?
- Earth -
- Do we have enough resources?
- Generalship
- Are our people experienced to tackle the
problems? - Law/Incentives
- Are we enforcing enough?
51 Judgment How to scale risks vs costs of
enforcement
- Stealing cases
- Low cost to detect, quick action with CCB
- E.g. China Logistics
- Complex deals
- High cost to investigate may require derivative
action by SFC - Mandarin Resources
High Gains
? Gains to miscreants
- Minor Infractions
- HKEx to enforce through Listing Rules,
Intermediaries better Corporate Governance
- Unfair deals
- Minority shareholders complain, but high cost to
investigate correct - E.g. Oxford
Low Gains
Low Costs
High Costs
Costs of Enforcement ?
Source/footnote
52Learning from FSA (UK)
- How do the best regulators approach this problem?
- Are they clear in their Regulatory Objectives?
- What methodology do they use?
- Can we adapt to Hong Kong conditions?
- Do we have the data on the risks involved?
- Can we measure the Regulatory Outcome?
- If in doubt, ask and learn!
-
53Firm risk assessment
54Pick Important Problems Tackling Risky Brokers
- Policy -
- Protect the investor, brokers can come and go
- Timing
- Do we wait for brokers to fail? or
- Should we have a preventive strategy?
- Terrain
- Lets map out the industry wide and firm level
risks Engage PWC and ODriscoll Expert
consultancy to give staff confidence in tackling
problem - Command
- How do we prioritize the issues?
- Law/Incentives
- Can we tackle this alone?
55Fix them.
- Identify the risks -
- Financial Margin Finance
- StructuralPooling
- Conduct..Integrity
- Systemic.Contagion
- Timing
- Fast Solution
- Phased Solution
- Wait See
- Terrain
- Whats the size of the problem?
- Law/Incentives
- Who owns this problem?
56Identifying the Risks Zoom in from Macro to
Micro
- Size of Industry - HK50 bn
- Capital HK24 bn (47 CAR) broadly solvent
- Margin Finance exposure 264 brokers with HK12
bn margin loans, financed by HK3.3 bn bank loans - Margin shortfall (black hole) ? HK800 mn,
Compensation Fund HK800 mn (enough to fill
hole) - Problem Brokers
- PwC - 39
- ODriscoll 17 (client securities pledged 2.1
bn) - Secured bank debt 577 mn)
- SFC own analysis 14
- Critical watch list 3 or 4
- Number of Active margin clients 64,000 (26,000
in 17 identified problem brokers)
57We need Allies to solve this problem
- Can the problem be solved by Department alone? -
No! - Can SFC alone solve the problem? No!
- This is a systemic and historical problem that
can only be solved by the whole community so we
must find Allies- - HK Government must back the solution Financial
Secretary, Financial Services Bureau, Department
of Justice - Good brokers stand to gain by eliminating risky
competitors - Banks and HKMA stand to gain from a healthier
financial sector - Legislative Council needs to change laws and
rules - Investors need to understand investor
education - Media and Opinion Makers must understand and
support - Everyone stands to gain from a good solution
but they must be convinced that it is in their
interest.tell everyone!
58None of us is smarter than all of us
Skills of C
Problem
Skills of A
Skills of B
A, B or C do not have knowledge or skills to
solve problem alone.
59Time, Terrain Tactics
- Russian solution to Six Day War
- A legacy problem cannot be solved overnight
therefore we need time and resources to solve it - Offensive Tactics Market Product Development
get the industry revenue up - Defensive Tactics Through improvement to
Financial Infrastructure re-engineering
regulatory processes to reduce costs to industry
(make industry more competitive) - Deterrence Tactics - Enforce, Identify, Isolate
and then Eliminate problem registrants - Have a 3-year (2001-2004) game plan focus on
the outcomes - Every division within SFC has a key role!
60Concluding Thought
- Never tell people how to do things. Tell them
what you want them to achieve, and they will
surprise you with their ingenuity.US Gen.
George Patton
61Next Lecture
- Lecture 1 A Macro-History of Chinese Governance
- Lecture 2 Theory and Practice of Governance
Lecture 3 Leadership in Regulatory Environment
Lecture 4 Money, Property Rights and Markets - Lecture 5 Practice of Financial Regulation
- Lecture 6 A Property Rights Framework
- Lecture 7 Practice of Bank Supervision
- Lecture 8 Asian and International Financial
Markets - Lecture 9 The Regulation of Listed Companies
- Lecture 10 Consolidated Financial Regulation
62Thank You
Questions to as_at_andrewsheng.net