Title: CatchingUp: Financially Integrating Europe
1Catching-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
3Core and Periphery (infrastructure)
4Core and Periphery
Core and Periphery (market size)
GDP per capita per km
5The 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
6Catching-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
7New 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
8Financial 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
9Financial 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)
10Policy 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
11Part I EU financial integration
12Financial 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)
13but 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
14Financial 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)
15Implementation 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)
16Part II CEE financial integration
17Different starting points
- Soviet heritage
- Degree of central planning
- Experience of private enterprise
- Early reforms
- Macroeconomic overhang
18different 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)
19different 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
21Emerging 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
22Control Increasingly Concentrated
23Ownership and Control in Central and Eastern
Europe
24Western Europe and the US
25Financial 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
26Foreign 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
27Rapid implementation of Acquis (company law)
28(No Transcript)
29Corporate 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)
30Website Disclosure
31Uneven Enforcement (Required and actual report
disclosure)
32Disclosure 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
33What 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?
34Part III How to improve enforcement
35Enforcement, not laws-on-the-books, vary with
development
36What 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)
37Choice 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?
38Corporate 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
39Limits 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
40Change 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)
42Part IV Club-in-Club to speed up pace of
reform(Baltic Financial Zone)
43Club-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
44Baltic 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
45Baltic 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
46Policy 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
47Core 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