Financial Sector Assessment a handbook, Chapter 4 Assessing Financial Structure and Financial Development, imf and World Bank, August 2005
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- Box 4.2 Access to Financial Services from Abroad
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I H G F E D C B A 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Taxation of Banking Taxation and quasi-taxation issues are important for banking. Among the most prominent are (a) the issue of loan–loss provisioning (can banks deduct provisions allowed by the banking regulator from income before calculating tax?) and (b) the implicit taxes through reserve requirements. The former can affect the incentive to make adequate provisions promptly, while the latter can affect interest spreads, especially in times of high inflation and high nominal interest rates. Other Issues Are minimum deposit requirements or fees for customers effectively cutting out the small depositor? What lines of business do banks find most profitable and unprofitable? Are there any pressures from government to do lines of business that are unprofitable? Do banks submit to such pressure? Analyzing the interbank market is important, so one should ask the following: How liquid is the market, is there tiering (another indicator of segmentation), and who are the main takers? Box 4.2 Access to Financial Services from Abroad Development Role of Foreign Banks National authorities and local commentators often express concern at the likely development conse- quences of a growing share of the financial sector coming under foreign control. The typical fears are that small enterprises and remote, rural areas will not be served by foreign-owned banks and that cherry- picking by foreign-owned banks will weaken local banks. In fact, although the client profile of foreign- owned banks often differs sharply from that of locally owned banks (especially when foreign-owned banks have only a limited retail presence because of regula- tory restrictions or their own business strategy), it is often observed that an expansion in a foreign-owned bank’s share of the total market is associated with a greater emphasis on the small and medium enterprise (SME) sector by local banks. Checking on such dimensions of the competitive dynamics of the sector will help alert national authorities to any shortcom- ings along those dimensions. The implicit training provided by the leading inter- national banks both for other market participants and for regulators can represent an almost costless gain for national authorities. The relationship between foreign-owned banks and regulators can be somewhat delicate in that regulators are responsible for local oversight of the foreign entity. Nevertheless, that entity likely enjoys superior risk management prac- tices and other systems and head office scrutiny. By observing and learning from those practices, the local supervisor can accelerate technology transfer to the local market. Access to Foreign Securities Markets The tendency of larger companies to take their stock market listings to larger international mar- kets—whether through a primary listing or dual list- ing abroad, or by issuance of depository receipts—is often seen as an adverse development by local mar- ket intermediaries because the intermediaries receive a smaller share of total fees and commissions. Thus, local market liquidity may be adversely affected. However, from the perspective of the economy as a whole, the net benefit is likely to be positive, with not only a lower cost of capital, but also an indirect effect through the importation of enhanced stan- dards of corporate transparency, which are likely to be spread, at least partly, to firms that do not have international listings. Opening the local equity market to foreign inves- tors is also generally seen as a positive dimension with lower average cost of capital and probably lower net volatility. However, opening nonresident access to domestic financial markets and enhanc- ing resident access to foreign financial markets will require the careful sequencing of capital account liberalization measures as part of a broader financial market development strategy. These considerations are further explained in chapter 12. 83 Chapter 4: Assessing Financial Structure and Financial Development Download 139.09 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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