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Chapter 4: Assessing Financial Structure and Financial Development
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services they receive (including from abroad) are adequate to their needs. Development
assessments must express a general view on this issue,
though in many countries, especially
low-income countries, detailed quantification may be beyond the scope of the assessment.
Special studies of the finances of the corporate
sector or of household, microenterprise,
and SME access to finance can be considered where data can be made readily available.
4.5.1
Enterprise Finance
An assessment of demand for and access to financial and especially credit services by
enterprises relies on financial information from firms and on
surveys and anecdotal evi-
dence from financial institutions, banks, and other market participants. While data on
listed companies
are often readily available, few developing countries have consistent
databases on SMEs. Ideally, corporate data should be combined with bank data to assess
both the different sectoral and business line focus of banks and
the competitiveness of the
banking market (e.g., by considering the number of bank relationships per firm). Such
analysis should also be informed by the available data on infrastructure, especially about
the legal system and the information environment. The available
data could reveal that
certain products, such as leasing or factoring, do not constitute
valid financing options for
enterprises. Factors behind such missing markets would have to be examined.
When one considers financing patterns, in addition to bank or equity finance, it is
also important
to focus on trade finance, which is an important financing source, espe-
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