Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks

Infrastructure is critical to economic development. When infrastructure companies are owned and operated by the government, however, they create significant sources of fiscal risk. These fiscal risks can be sizable, but they are often preventable w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Herrera Dappe, Matias, Musacchio, Aldo, Pan, Carolina, Semikolenova, Yadviga Viktorivna, Turkgulu, Burak, Barboza, Jonathan
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/256841647366128576/Smoke-and-Mirrors-Infrastructure-State-Owned-Enterprises-and-Fiscal-Risks
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37158
id okr-10986-37158
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-371582022-03-18T05:10:43Z Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks Herrera Dappe, Matias Musacchio, Aldo Pan, Carolina Semikolenova, Yadviga Viktorivna Turkgulu, Burak Barboza, Jonathan STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISE STATE-OWNED BANKS MARKET VALUE OF EQUITY CONTINGENT LIABILITY ACCESS TO EQUITY GOVERNMENT BUDGET MANAGEMENT Infrastructure is critical to economic development. When infrastructure companies are owned and operated by the government, however, they create significant sources of fiscal risk. These fiscal risks can be sizable, but they are often preventable with proper planning, risk assessment, and strict rules and procedures for corporate and fiscal governance. This paper examines fiscal risk stemming from state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the infrastructure sector in a sample of 135 firms in 19 countries from an original database of SOE financials for 2009–18. The paper develops a typology of fiscal risks and their determinants, builds new measures of fiscal injections to SOEs, and documents them using the novel database. The results show that governments support SOEs through a remarkably wide range of fiscal instruments. The fiscal cost of supporting infrastructure SOEs is usually below 1 percent of gross domestic product. Support is more prevalent and frequent than previously thought. The findings show that fiscal risk stems not only from “tail risk,” but also from the everyday operation of infrastructure SOEs. The paper calculates the Altman Z” score (a measure of default risk) and shows that it can be used to forecast the need for fiscal injections in SOEs. 2022-03-17T17:53:02Z 2022-03-17T17:53:02Z 2022-03-15 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/256841647366128576/Smoke-and-Mirrors-Infrastructure-State-Owned-Enterprises-and-Fiscal-Risks http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37158 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISE
STATE-OWNED BANKS
MARKET VALUE OF EQUITY
CONTINGENT LIABILITY
ACCESS TO EQUITY
GOVERNMENT BUDGET MANAGEMENT
spellingShingle STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISE
STATE-OWNED BANKS
MARKET VALUE OF EQUITY
CONTINGENT LIABILITY
ACCESS TO EQUITY
GOVERNMENT BUDGET MANAGEMENT
Herrera Dappe, Matias
Musacchio, Aldo
Pan, Carolina
Semikolenova, Yadviga Viktorivna
Turkgulu, Burak
Barboza, Jonathan
Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks
description Infrastructure is critical to economic development. When infrastructure companies are owned and operated by the government, however, they create significant sources of fiscal risk. These fiscal risks can be sizable, but they are often preventable with proper planning, risk assessment, and strict rules and procedures for corporate and fiscal governance. This paper examines fiscal risk stemming from state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the infrastructure sector in a sample of 135 firms in 19 countries from an original database of SOE financials for 2009–18. The paper develops a typology of fiscal risks and their determinants, builds new measures of fiscal injections to SOEs, and documents them using the novel database. The results show that governments support SOEs through a remarkably wide range of fiscal instruments. The fiscal cost of supporting infrastructure SOEs is usually below 1 percent of gross domestic product. Support is more prevalent and frequent than previously thought. The findings show that fiscal risk stems not only from “tail risk,” but also from the everyday operation of infrastructure SOEs. The paper calculates the Altman Z” score (a measure of default risk) and shows that it can be used to forecast the need for fiscal injections in SOEs.
format Working Paper
author Herrera Dappe, Matias
Musacchio, Aldo
Pan, Carolina
Semikolenova, Yadviga Viktorivna
Turkgulu, Burak
Barboza, Jonathan
author_facet Herrera Dappe, Matias
Musacchio, Aldo
Pan, Carolina
Semikolenova, Yadviga Viktorivna
Turkgulu, Burak
Barboza, Jonathan
author_sort Herrera Dappe, Matias
title Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks
title_short Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks
title_full Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks
title_fullStr Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks
title_full_unstemmed Smoke and Mirrors : Infrastructure State-Owned Enterprises and Fiscal Risks
title_sort smoke and mirrors : infrastructure state-owned enterprises and fiscal risks
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/256841647366128576/Smoke-and-Mirrors-Infrastructure-State-Owned-Enterprises-and-Fiscal-Risks
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37158
_version_ 1764486638357970944