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CONCLUSIONS

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Title: CONCLUSIONS


1
CONCLUSIONS
2
Common Point 1
  • FfD is a domain that deserves a specific
    attention today
  • No institutional approach functional approach
    (de B)
  • Yet, institutions matters (see below)
  • A holistic view of FfD, including position within
    financial sector must be taken
  • No one-size-fits-all approach
  • Must take into account that DFIs in Zone Franc
    are submitted to commercial-bank regulations
    (provisioning, usury rate, etc. (Comores, BNDA)

3
Common Point 2
  • FfDs raison-dêtre is to bring finance to
    specific clients/projects
  • Market failures and vulnerable economic actors
  • Local level
  • Local groups (BNDA)
  • Municipalities (DBSA)
  • SMEs (ADB)
  • Renewable Energies
  • State failures
  • Infrastructures (DBSA, BOAD, CDG)

4
Common Point 3
  • FfD is composed of a combination of variety of
    (i) specific financial instruments, (ii) specific
    non-financial instruments.
  • Not just long-term finance
  • Specific Financial Instruments
  • Grants,
  • Loans
  • Leasing (DFCU, BOAD)
  • Guarantees (BOAD)
  • Equity participation (DBSA, Tunisia, BOAD, CDG)
  • Underwriting (DBSA, BOAD, CDG)
  • Arranging (DBSA, BOAD, CDG)
  • Specific non-financial instruments
  • Advorisy Services Development entails more
    than financing (DBSA),
  • Technical Assistance (DBSA, BOAD, DFCU)
  • Capacity Building (DBSA)
  • External Technical Services (BNDA)

5
Common Point 4
  • Resources are needed to build FfD financial
    instruments.
  • Liquidity in banking systems is very important in
    Africa not used for FfD (de B)
  • Two opposite situations
  • DFIs are banks
  • Relatively easy access to resources through
    deposits from clients and governments (BNDA, BGD)
  • Use of resources difficult because banking
    regulations (BNDA)
  • DFIs are not banks
  • Resources are more difficult to mobilize (BOAD,
    DFCU, DBSA)
  • Use of mobilized resources left to DFIs because
    of lack of external regulations
  • Concessional resources are needed
  • Yes (BOAD, CDG)
  • Not necessarily (DFCU)

6
Common Point 5
  • The organization supplying FfD (DFIs) must be a
    complex organization.
  • It must be a Knowledge Organization
  • DBSA We are an advanced knowledge-based
    organization
  • BOAD études sur le coton, PME, HIV, etc.
  • It must be an organization capable of playing
    multiple functions
  • Financiers
  • Partner (DBSA, BOAD, CDG)
  • Adviser (DBSA, DFCU)
  • It must be an organization knowing how to be a
    catalyst/facilitator (DBSA, BOAD, CDG)
  • When DFIs are banks, they must
  • Abide banking regulations (BNDA, BGD, Comores)
  • What can we do when regulators do not understand
    the constraints of FfD (BDEAC, BNDA)
  • Should not we revisit banking regulations to give
    more margin of action to FfD activities ?
  • How can the two domains (commercial and
    developmental) be coordonated ?
  • By combining them in a single organization (BNDA,
    BGD)
  • By separating the two domains (DFCU)
  • By creating separate entities for each
    developmental activity (BGD).

7
Common Point 6
  • DFIs can be profitable.
  • BOAD Nous navons pas vocation à faire des
    profits, mais dans la diversification et dans la
    conduite des actions nous générons des profits.
  • DFCU, BNDA
  • DBSA  making profit shields DFIs government
    interference.

8
Common Point 7 (1/2)
  • As organizations, DFIs must have a specific
    governance.
  • Problem
  • Capital of the DFIs will be predominately public
  • Mission de service public (BNDA, BGD, DBSA, CDG,
    BOAD)
  • Political pressure to promote regional
    integration (DBSA, BOAD)
  • Market failures (private sector not interested)
  • State failures (national budget cannot finance)
  • Risks
  • Interference from government (BOAD, Comores, ADB,
    Egypt)
  • Civil servants managing FfD (Tunisia)
  • Crowding out private sector (IBRD)

9
Common Point 7 (2/2)
  • Proposed solutions
  • DFIs must diversify its shareholders to bring
    counterweight to government (BOAD, BGD)
  • DFIs must pay attention to the composition of
    their Board
  • Board Members should be trained and made aware
    that they have a responsibility (DFCU)
  • External personalities/independent persons will
    bring weight to Board (BGD)
  • DFIs that are not banks should impose on
    themselves stringent rules
  • Criteria of internal rules of some DFIs are more
    severe than banking regulations (SADCC)
  • Pressure from outside actors is useful
  • Les marchés nous jugent (BOAD)
  • Ratings are crucial (SADCC, BOAD)
  • Being profitable is best protection from
    government see above (DBSA).

10
Draft action proposals
11
  1. Make an inventory of DFI success stories
    lessons learnt
  2. Organise sub-regional consultations
  3. Organise exchange of DFI best practices and
    standards
  4. Liaise with other fora on corporate governance
    (IBRD, OECD)
  5. Organise a working group on regulations to work
    on DFI specificities
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