Title: Finance in Transitional and Developing Economies: China and Others
1Finance in Transitional and Developing Economies
China and Others
- Topics
- Growth and Inequality in a Dualistic Economy
- Property Rights and Distribution
- Financial Depth vs. Breadth
2Surplus Labor in Agriculture Marginal Product
approaches 0
3Consumption
investment
Agricultural Production
investment
(transition)
Non-Agricultural Production
Gus Ranis Labor Surplus Economies,
http//papers.ssrn.com
4Surplus Labor, Dualistic Economy Nobel Prize
Winning Model
- Developed by
- Arthur Lewis (St. Lucia)
- Gustav Ranis (Germany)
- John Fei (Taiwan)
- Growth with Equity The Taiwan Case
- (Oxford University Press, 1979)
- John C. H. Fei, Gustav Ranis, Shirley W. Y. Kuo
5Implications of Two-Sector Model
- Agricultural and Industrial Wages Linked, kept
flat by Surplus Labor. - Wages can only rise strongly when Labor Surplus
is used up. - Non-Agricultural Profits grow much faster than
Wages.
6Tied Wages, Japan
7Tied Wages, Taiwan
8(No Transcript)
9Property Rights Distribution
- East Asian Development successes linked with new
broadly distributed forms of property rights.
(South Korea, Taiwan, China, Vietnam) - These property rights land reforms achieve
- Better matching of labor with land resources,
- Incentives for long term investment,
- More liquidity in the market for agricultural
property. - Broader Distribution of Financial Assets is more
complex, but may have even greater long term
benefits for productivity and growth.
10TWO TRANSITIONS on INCOME DISTRIBUTION
East-Asian Growth and Equality Inversely
Correlated
East-European No Clear Pattern
11Soviet-Sphere Privatizations
- Large Range of Methods
- Rapid Voucher Privatization,
- Czech Republic
- Gradual Privatization, Hungary
- Oligarch Loans-for-Shares, Russia
12Chinas Financial SystemDeep but not Broad
- We will see that Financial Assets in China
- Have unusual depth, forming an unusually high
portion of GDP, but - Lack the breadth associated with other Rapidly
Developing Economies, since they are narrowly
confined to the Banking Sector.
13Financial Deepening Correlates with Higher GDP
per capita
http//unctad.org/en/docs/dp_142.en.pdf
14But Chinas M2/GDP ratio is out of proportion to
its GDP
http//www.allcountries.org/china_statistics/index
.html
15M2 and Household Savings Very High Proportion of
GDP
16http//www.allcountries.org/china_statistics/index
.html
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19Volatility of Shanghai Composite Index
20If Household Saving is Bottled-up in Banks,
May Pressure Excess Stock Speculation
21Bank Dependency may also Weaken Response to
Currency Crisis
8
6
4
2
0
-2
-4
-6
-8
t
t1
t2
t3
t-1
t-2
t-3
www.meti.go.jp/english/report/downloadfiles/g99W00
4e.pdf
22Banking is State-Owned in China
McKinsey Global Institute, China Capital Report,
2006
23State Banks Loan Mostlyto State-Connected
Enterprises
24Foreign Private Enterprises More Efficient,
Even in Similar Industries
25(No Transcript)
26Integration of Reforms
- Observed Problems Closely Inter-linked
Undeveloped Consumer Loan Market
Very Small Bond Market
Limited SME Access to Capital
Lack of Domestic Institutional Investors
Cheap Corporate Bank Loans
Small, Under-performing Equity Market
Inefficient Bank Operation
27Poor Credit Assessment
Limited forms of Collateral
Very Small Bond Market
Undeveloped Consumer Loan Market
Limited SME Access to Capital
Lack of Domestic Institutional Investors
Cheap Corporate Bank Loans
Lack of Bank Competition
Small, Under-performing Equity Market
Inefficient Bank Operation
28ConclusionIf Problems are Inter-Linked-
Reforms must also be well-Integrated