CatchingUp: Financially Integrating Europe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 48
About This Presentation
Title:

CatchingUp: Financially Integrating Europe

Description:

Czech Republic) Foreign entry (Hungary vs. Czech Republic) ... 5 in the Slovak Republic to 153 companies in Poland) ... Disclosure: Czech Republic vs. Poland ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:40
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 49
Provided by: erik205
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CatchingUp: Financially Integrating Europe


1
Catching-UpFinancially Integrating Europe
  • Erik Berglof, SITE, Stockholm School of
    Economics CEPR and The Brookings Institution

2
  • Had I been present at the creation I would have
    given some useful hints for the better ordering
    of the universe
  • Alphonso X, The Wise,1252-84, King of Leon and
    Castile

3
Core and Periphery (infrastructure)
4
Core and Periphery
Core and Periphery (market size)
GDP per capita per km
5
The European ChallengeCatching-Up
  • Financial integration with real integration
    (financial and real development)
  • CEE catching up with Western Europe
  • Europe catching up with the United States
  • Enforcement of laws and regulation
  • Periphery mostly FDI (few multinationals)
  • Some countries less competitive, less reform

6
Catching-Up will require more(Aghion, 2005)
  • From imitation to innovation
  • Different source of productivity growth
  • Entrepreneurship, exit, and entry not existing
    firms
  • Different quality of human capital
  • Tertiary (graduate) education ltgt RD
  • Different financial system
  • Promote entry and exit finance innovation

7
New engines of change needed
  • Most trade gains from accession already realized
  • FDI flows weakening as large privatizations are
    over, and service gap is closing
  • Institutional change difficult to sustain as EU
    membership is achieved
  • ...and EU center weakened

8
Financial integration Basic premises
  • Institutional development gt financial
    development and economic growth
  • Finance not been the driver so far
  • Financial development ltgt integration
  • Finance critical for future growth
  • Access to finance, not integration per se

9
Financial Integration (and Development)
  • Integration of EU 15
  • Uneven (bonds vs. retail banking private equity
    vs. syndicated bank lending)
  • Integration of CEEC
  • Foreign ownership, but little functional
    integration poor access to investment finance
  • Integration of hinterland
  • Great Divide (underdevelopment fragility)

10
Policy implications
  • Enforcement of existing laws and regulation key
    to financial development and integration in CEE
  • Not only government (EU and national)
  • Private ordering (soft law), and private and
    public enforcement complement each other
  • Success stories suggest change possible, but is
    their political will?
  • EU pressure weakened, but club-in-club
    initiative may trigger EU-wide change

11
Part I EU financial integration
12
Financial integration at EU levelA lot has
happened
  • Financial Services Action Plan (FSAP) to broaden
    and deepen capital markets
  • Lisbon European Council set 2005 as the year when
    Action Plan fully implemented
  • Introduction of euro
  • Creation of single market (for services?)
  • EU accession (Copenhagen Criteria)

13
but integration remains uneven(Berglof et al.,
2005)
  • Across sectors
  • Bonds vs. retail banking (particularly to SMEs)
  • Private equity vs. syndicated bank lending
  • Across countries
  • Italian banking (protectionism)
  • Banca Antonveneta and Banca Nazionale de Lavoro
  • CEEC Banking (access to finance)
  • Strong control, but little functional integration

14
Financial integration at EU level Remaining
challenges
  • Multiplicity of regulatory and supervisory
    regimes
  • Slows down functional integration
  • Regulatory and non-regulatory barriers to entry
  • Discriminatory vs. non-discriminatory barriers
  • Slow progress in implementation of regulatory and
    supervisory framework
  • Compared to speed of industry transformation
  • Integration of new member states
  • Broader, functional integration needed
    (enforcement)

15
Implementation and enforcement
  • EU (EMU) accession effect waning
  • Implementation of FSAP lagging
  • Lamfalussy Process not sufficient
  • Options
  • Single regulator and supervisor
  • Lead regulators/supervisors
  • Enhanced cooperation (avant-garde)

16
Part II CEE financial integration
17
Different starting points
  • Soviet heritage
  • Degree of central planning
  • Experience of private enterprise
  • Early reforms
  • Macroeconomic overhang

18
different policies
  • Bad loan restructuring (Hungary vs. Poland)
  • Hospital banks (Poland vs. Czech Republic)
  • Bank privatization (Poland vs. Czech Republic)
  • Entry policy (Poland vs. Czech Republic)
  • Foreign entry (Hungary vs. Czech Republic)
  • Firm privatization (Poland vs. Czech Republic)
  • Stock markets (Hungary vs. Czech Republic)

19
different trajectories
20
but systemic convergence
  • Strong domination for bank intermediation
  • Investment financed through internal funds
  • Most external funds from FDI
  • Markets limited role in corporate finance
  • Legal environment Laws and regulation on the
    books, but weak enforcement

21
Emerging European Capitalism(Berglof and Bolton,
2002 Berglof and Pajuste, 2004)
  • Private owners dominate, but state still
    important
  • Ownership concentration high and increasing
  • Increasing separation of ownership and control
  • Corporate groupings and large foreign owners
  • Firms still owner-managed, but changing
  • Commercial banks dominant creditors

22
Control Increasingly Concentrated
23
Ownership and Control in Central and Eastern
Europe
24
Western Europe and the US
25
Financial integration
  • Lagged real integration, uneven and partial
  • Rapid integration of ownership
  • But less functional integration
  • Narrow banking portfolios
  • Fee-based activities
  • Working capital, but little investment finance

26
Foreign bank penetration(Gianetti and Ongena,
2005)
  • Broken up related (crony) lending
  • Expanded credit volumes
  • SME benefitted (much) less than large firms
  • gt CEE financial development (integration)
    about broadening and deepening access to
    finance institutional environment

27
Rapid implementation of Acquis (company law)
28
(No Transcript)
29
Corporate governance disclosure (Berglof and
Pajuste, 2005)
  • Regulation Annual reports - Websites
  • The data
  • All companies listed on the main (regulated)
    exchange in ten countries and covered by Amadeus
    financial companies excluded
  • Sample of 370 companies (from 5 in the Slovak
    Republic to 153 companies in Poland)
  • Website (370) annual reports (128)

30
Website Disclosure
31
Uneven Enforcement (Required and actual report
disclosure)
32
Disclosure patterns
  • Level of disclosure and enforcement varies
    substantially across firms and countries
  • Disclosure depends on legal framework, but not on
    the firms financial performance
  • But financial performance strongly correlated
    with availability of information (on website)
  • Larger, less leveraged, higher market-to-book,
    and more concentrated ownership gt more available

33
What is the CEE problem?
  • Controlling shareholders have come to stay
  • Main conflict controlling vs. minority
    shareholders
  • Few alternative mechanisms, but
  • Preventing fraud is paramount problem
  • Enforcement overriding issues
  • But is there the political will?

34
Part III How to improve enforcement
35
Enforcement, not laws-on-the-books, vary with
development
36
What enforcement mechanisms?(Berglof and
Claessens, 2005)
  • Private initiatives
  • Unilateral (e.g., reputation)
  • Bilateral (e.g., controlling shareholders)
  • Multilateral (e.g., self-regulating arrangements
    soft law)
  • Private law enforcement
  • Litigation most important tool
  • Public law/regulation enforcement
  • Traditional view of enforcement
  • Outside anchor (e.g., EU accession)

37
Choice of enforcement mechanisms
  • Overall institutional environment matters
  • Relative importance of a particular mechanism
  • Relative scope for policy impact
  • Mix of technologies will be used
  • Is there the political will?
  • Outside anchor?

38
Corporate governance and finance when enforcement
weak
  • Large blockholders main response
  • gt Conflicts controlling vs. minority
    shareholders
  • gt Strong reliance on internal finance
  • gt Bank finance dominate gt bank supervision
  • gt Illiquid financial (and takeover) markets
  • gt Other corporate governance mechanisms weak

39
Limits to what firms (can) do (Doidge, Karloyi,
and Stulz, 2004)
  • Almost all the variation in governance ratings
    across firms in emerging market economies
    explained by country characteristics
  • in developed market economies 50 depends on
    firms
  • Access to global markets improves governance
  • decreases the importance of home-country laws

40
Change in enforcement possible
  • Variation across and within countries change
    over time gt large scope for improvements
  • Disclosure Czech Republic vs. Poland
  • Not all aspects of enforcement equally important
    or easy to reform
  • Transparency Related transactions vs. director
    income
  • Transparency vs. control arrangements
  • Combine public and private enforcement and
    private ordering

41
(No Transcript)
42
Part IV Club-in-Club to speed up pace of
reform(Baltic Financial Zone)
43
Club-in-club(Berglof et al., 2004)
  • Mere threat can trigger change
  • Latent threat to form an EU inner core
  • Maastricht EMU
  • Amsterdam Reinforced Cooperation
  • Nice Enhanced Cooperation regulation
  • European Convention put it in the Constitution
  • Less than unanimity for ratification of
    Constitution?
  • Enhanced cooperation
  • Controlled by the Commission
  • Minimum 8 countries

44
Baltic Sea Financial Integration
  • Pan-Nordic financial industry strongly integrated
  • A few banks dominate seven markets and have
    significant presence in two more
  • OMX now control seven stock exchanges
  • Face nine regulators, nine supervisors plus
    numerous national private initiatives
  • Extensive regulatory/supervisory coordination

45
Baltic Financial Zone A test case and trigger
  • Financial integration proceeded very far
  • Same issues as whole of EU
  • Multiplicity of regulatory/supervisory regimes
  • Old and new member states
  • Less integrated members (Germany Poland)
  • Closely integrated non-member (Norway)
  • Hinterland (Russia)
  • Club-in-club initiative gt EU-wide effects?
  • a complement, not a substitute, to EU integration

46
Policy implications
  • Enforcement of existing laws and regulation are
    key to financial development and integration
  • Success stories suggest change possible, but is
    their political will?
  • Not only government
  • Private ordering (soft law), and private and
    public enforcement complement each other
  • Club-in-club initiative may trigger EU-wide
    change

47
Core and Periphery (infrastructure)
48
"If the Lord Almighty had consulted me before
embarking upon the Creation, I should have
recommended something simpler."
  • Alphonso X, The Wise, 1252-84, King of Leon and
    Castile
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com