Can The Unsophisticated Market Provide Discipline?
The authors question the widespread belief that market discipline on banks cannot be effective in less developed financial environments. There is no systematic tendency for low-income countries to lack the prerequisites for market discipline. Offs...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, D.C.
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/5062235/can-unsophisticated-market-provide-discipline http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14166 |
Summary: | The authors question the widespread
belief that market discipline on banks cannot be effective
in less developed financial environments. There is no
systematic tendency for low-income countries to lack the
prerequisites for market discipline. Offsetting factors to
the weaker market and formal information infrastructures are
(1) the less complex character of banking business in
low-income countries; (2) the growing internationalization
of these markets through the presence of foreign banks, and
through international trading of the debt and equity of
locally-controlled non-government banks; and (3) the smaller
size of the business and financial community. However,
continuing dominance by public sector banks in some
countries limits the likely development of market
monitoring, which is clearly a cause for concern, given the
disappointing record of governments around the world as
monitors of their self-owned banks. Countries should build
on this potential for market discipline by limiting the role
of explicit deposit guarantees, reducing state ownership of
banks where it is prevalent, and not putting all their eggs
in the supervisory basket. Greater disclosure, for example,
of how risk taking is rewarded and how rating agencies earn
their fees would support the development of better market
monitoring. Enhancing market discipline (pillar three) is
much more likely to be of use in most developing countries
than addressing the refinements of the risk-weighting system
of Basel II's first pillar. |
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