Title: STATE BANKS
1- STATE BANKS
- Direct Fiscal
- Costs of Restructuring in Transition Countries
- By Dr. Khaled Sherif
- Sector Manager, The World Bank
- Date November 4, 2003
2Current Assessment of State Bank Costs
- A recent World Bank study
- Reviewed 14 transition countries
- Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Albania, Croatia,
Romania, Slovakia, Turkey, Hungary, Lithuania,
Macedonia, Slovenia, Latvia, Poland, and Ukraine - Assessed 30 state owned banks from 1991-2002.
3Current Assessment of State Bank Costs
- The study focused on
- Direct fiscal cost recapitalization and bad
asset transfers and guarantees issued for
privatization purposes - Magnitude of cost to GDP, fiscal impact, debt
profile, bank capital
4DIRECT Fiscal Costs
- DIRECT costs approximate 50 billion
(recapitalization/bad asset transfers and
guarantees post-privatization) - Does NOT include
- Forbearance
- Losses run through non-banks
- Higher bond yields to generate earnings for
troubled banks - Higher interest rates on government securities
5Cost Comparison
- What does 50 billion buy?
- The 50 billion lost on state banks in transition
economies is equivalent to - Ten times the post-war reconstruction aid in
Bosnia over 7 years from all donors (5 billion) - 25 times the GDP of Armenia in 2001 (2 billion)
- The GDP of Hungary in 2001Eastern Europes best
performer (49 billion) - More than twice annual lending of the World Bank
to the entire world in 2002 (20 billion) - Total privatization revenue in ECA region from
1990-1997. (47 billion)
6 Direct Fiscal Costs ( billions)
gt 20 billion Turkey (ongoing)
10-20 billion Czech Republic (guarantees still in effect)
1-5 billion Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovak Republic, Slovenia
lt1 billion Albania, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Ukraine
7Gross Fiscal Costs to Average 1995-2002 GDP
gt15 Bulgaria, Czech Republic
10-15 Albania, Croatia, Slovakia, Turkey
5-10 Hungary, Lithuania, Macedonia, Romania, Slovenia
lt 5 Latvia, Poland, Ukraine
8Average Annualized Gross Fiscal Costs to Average
GDP (1995-2002)
gt 2 Bulgaria, Czech Republic
1-2 Albania, Croatia, Romania, Slovakia, Turkey
.5-1.0 Hungary, Lithuania, Macedonia, Slovenia
lt.5 Latvia, Poland, Ukraine
9Sales Proceeds of State Banks
- Total about 9.4 billion (18 of gross costs)
- Most in Poland, Czech Republic, Bulgaria and
Slovakia - Relative to Gross Fiscal Cost, proceeds have been
material only in Bulgaria (52), Poland (gt100 so
far), Slovakia (38) and Slovenia (46) - Other countries proceeds generally lt25 of
direct fiscal costs - THEREFORE there is almost always a high net cost
to recapitalization
10Fiscal Costs AFTER Bank Sales to Average
1995-2002 GDP
gt10 Albania, Czech Republic, Turkey
5-10 Bulgaria, Croatia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Romania, Slovakia
lt5 Hungary, Latvia, Slovenia, Ukraine
Surplus To date, only Poland has generated a net surplus. However, this is projected to be offset by PKO BP.
11Average Annualized Net Fiscal Costs to Avg.
1995-2002 GDP
gt1.5 Czech Republic, Turkey
1-1.5 Albania, Croatia, Romania
0.5-1 Bulgaria, Hungary, Lithuania, Macedonia, Slovakia
lt0.5 Latvia, Slovenia, Ukraine
12The Remaining Challenge
- The remaining challenge for policy makers is to
privatize or liquidate the loss-making state
banks. - Major problems with state banks continue to
plague the region. - At end-2000 there were more than 78 state banks
in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. -
13Lessons from Experience
- Dos
- Privatize early, not late
- Seek out a strategic investor
- Keep direct costs down
- If restructuring, link to overall banking sector
restructuring with time-bound plans and
objectives -
14Lessons from Experience
- Donts
- Incur major recapitalization and asset transfer
costs - Issue large or open-ended guarantees
- Provide ongoing forbearance to troubled banks
- Try to aggressively grow out of traditional
problems
15Findings Support1
- Continued state ownership in the banking sector
entails major direct economic costs - ? distortions linked to government and real
sector - ? risk to systemic and macro stability
- ? political patronage is a major factor and risk
item
16Findings Support2
- Enormous opportunity cost in foregone investment
- ? presence of state banks and protection deters
prime-rated banks - ? when prime-rated banks enter the market, they
assume less credit risk when doubts linger about
the role of the state - ? credit remains costly
- ? systemic risk remains higher
17Findings Support3
- Too big to fail ? perverse effects
- ? Size and importance of state banks distorted
by flawed valuation standards and classification - ? Rooted in big banks financing big
industries and big state farms, all of which
was unsustainable and inefficient - ? Delays in Bulgaria and Macedonia led to losses
20-30 of 1998 GDP - ? Estonias direct approach 1.4 of GDP
18Findings Support4
- Delayed reforms add to cost and reduce confidence
in civil institutions - ? Slow approach to correction higher cost of
recapitalization - ? Applies to private banks as well if run on a
patronage basis - ? Loss of confidence ? lower deposits, lower
levels of intermediation, higher incidence of tax
evasion
19Findings Support5
- Legal reform is insufficient
- ? Laws not enough
- ? Courts, extra-judicial supports needed for
effective implementation - ? Regulatory/supervisory capacity with strong
mandate needed - ? General culture of financial discipline
required - ? Better information needed
20Findings Support6
- Remaining state banks should generally be treated
as resolution cases - ? Most have poor earnings and solvency prospects
- ? Liquidation will help in many cases with
consolidation, new entry of sound banks - ? Effective resolution will ultimately stimulate
competition, bring down net spreads, put
intermediation on sound footing
21Recommendations 1
- Privatize or liquidate unless restructuring
prospects are sound - ? The test should be prospects for attracting
strategic investment - ? Costly recapitalization probably not warranted
- ? Whether restructuring should precede
privatization should be determined case-by-case
with clear criteria
22Recommendations 2
- Pre-privatization consolidation has been costly
and complex - ? Market mechanisms usually more efficient
- ? If sufficient number of well capitalized
private and foreign banks in place, they will
help to make the market - ? Exit of state sends important signal
23Recommendations 3
- Purchase and assumption techniques should be
applied - ? Difficult in transition countries due to
judicial and asset disposition constraints - ? Nonetheless, market signals serve as catalysts
for effective resolution - ? Least-cost focus important as part of the
signal, and for macro purposes as well
24Recommendations 4
- Regulatory options are available when the market
is not as responsive as desired - ? Regulatory/administrative approach can be
carried out by specialists - ? Should be structured as corrective action on
systemic basis - ? Should be linked to least-cost resolution
approach
25Recommendations 5
- When all else fails, liquidate creatively
- ? Sell to credit unions, micro-finance, NBFIs
- ? Use to stimulate other financial services on
broadly distributed basis - ? Take into account specific needs of locations
and account holders during the process - ? BUT liquidate to contain the bleeding
26Final Thoughts
- Private banking needed, reinforced by strong
governance AND sound prudential norms - Overnight privatization is NOT required
- BUT, strategic vision and a determined,
deliberate approach is - Private investment, fit and proper management,
modern systems, and open market opportunities in
a growing economy can provide intermediation
needs better than state institutions
27Final Thoughts
- Financial stability issues can be managed,
including over the medium and long term - Institutional capacity in banks and regulatory
institutions is more likely to ensure stability - Privatization is needed to cut the patronage
chord - Privatization is not enough
- Governance, ethics and observable codes of
conduct are needed