development banks and basel ii1 - rogerio sobreira... · in relation to the rest of this text...
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DEVELOPMENT BANKS AND BASEL II1
Rogério Sobreira2
1. Introduction
The implementation of the Basel II agreement in the financial markets of world
economies has been seen as a significant advance in relation to the model enforced
under the first agreement (Basle I). It is generally understood that the new agreement
represents a substantial advance in relation to the first because it allows banks to better
deal with the risks to which they are exposed, notably credit, market and operational
risks.
Both the original agreement and Basel II have the essential concern of avoiding the
excessive exposure of banks to the risk of bankruptcy, with perverse reflections for the
banking system, especially because typical commercial banks are the institutions
responsible for the payment system of economies and as a result the bankruptcy of one
institution could unleash a domino effect for the banking system as a whole, with
perverse consequences for the economy.
Nevertheless, when the application of these principles to development banks is
considered it can be noted that certain inconsistencies exist, notably the fact that these
institutions are typically public institutions – or at least strongly dependent on public
funding – and they do not operate the payment system of the economy. Therefore, the
application of the Basle rules to these institutions does not make sense.
However, this does not mean that these institutions should not deal appropriately with
the risks to which they are exposed, but rather that Basle does not represent an
appropriate set of recommendations for how these institutions should deal with their
1 This paper is based on the discussions that took place among a group of researchers – Fernando Cardim Carvalho, Jennifer Hermann, Mário Rubens Filho and Mauro Santos Silva, and the author himself – working for the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES). Thus, I would like to acknowledge their contributions to the discussions and opinions. However, all the usual caveats apply.2 Associate Professor of Economics and Finance, Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration (EBAPE), Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV). E-mail: [email protected]
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risks, whether because the proposed form of dealing with risks is inadequate, or because
other relevant risks for these institutions are not covered by Basle I and II.
In relation to the rest of this text Section 2 will discuss an appropriate concept of
development banks, showing that there does not exist a general theory of development
banks, but highlighting some important differences between banks in general. Section 3
presents some of the essential elements of Basle I and, more especially, Basel II.
Section 4 discusses how appropriate the implementation of Basel II is for development
banks. Section 5 presents the conclusions.
2. Development banks: some concepts
Development banks are by definition institutions concerned with national economic
development. Unlike multiple and commercial banks, however, there is no theory
capable of precisely defining what a development bank is.
Therefore, by associating the figure of the development bank with its functionality for
national development, it is not possible for us to identify a single model or a typical
form of a national development bank (Diamond, 1957)
The reason why it is practically impossible to create an economic theory of
development banks lies in the fact that the national development process in countries is
different and has different matrices.
We can thus state that development banks are by nature financial institutions designed
to meet specific demands, related to the economic development process, where, to what
extent and in the way that society defines. Therefore, they are hybrid financial
institutions that reflect, as well as the objective conditions of national economic
development, the socio-economic profile of the countries where they operate.
In order to try to reach a concept of development banks, it is necessary to first advance
in the understanding of the nature of development banks on three fronts: historical,
conceptual and theoretical.
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2.1. Origins of development banks: first experiences
As Diamond noted (idem, p. 20), at the beginning of the nineteenth century in Europe,
and especially in Great Britain, there was no need to create an institution that would
provide long term funding for investments. This was a result of the capacity that
companies had at that time of raising their own funds to finance investment, as well as
the reduced amount of long term capital required at the beginning of the industrial
revolution for industrial ventures.
This scenario was not observed in the European countries that followed Great Britain in
the industrial revolution (Diamond, idem; Gerschenkron, 1962). In these cases, “[t]he
capital required to make the critical jump from a small to a large enterprise or to create a
new enterprise on a large scale was greater than the banks could provide, even when
they were willing to provide long-term finance.” (Diamond, idem, p. 21).
The resolution found was the creation of a capital market, through which companies
could issue shares and bonds to finance their investment needs. In this environment
commercial banks came to perform a central role, since they began to actively invest in
activities that required a large investment of capital. These banks began to act as
investors. As noted by Diamond (idem p. 23):
“The novelty of these institutions lay in their combination of joint-stock
organization, emphasis on long-term investment, power to mobilize resources
through the issuance of bonds and promissory notes and (...) vigorous
promotional activity.”
According to this model, the banks were responsible for launching and financing
comercial and industrial companies. For these institutions deposits were of secondary
importance. They kept close contacts with the investor public, both directly and through
commercial banks.
Thus, between the end of the nineteenth century and the First World War the
development banks created in Europe were largely owned by private capital and
concentrated their resources in large companies. It is important to note that the French
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model of the development bank – based principally on Crédit Mobilier – generated a
series of its own institutions in the capital market to stimulate the development of the
economy.
After the Second World War various development banks were created whose principal
characteristic was the important role governments played in them. As once again noted
by Diamond (ibid., p. 39):
“[T]hese institutions have specialized in one particular field of activity, have
usually (and, as time has gone by, increasingly) been sponsored by
governments, have generally had government aid in the form of share capital
or low interest or interest-free loans or guaranteed bond issues, and have often
been under government direction of have had government representation on
their policy-making bodies.”
As a result the institutions created in this period maintained a strong relationship with
national development plans for industry and agriculture. Therefore, despite the role
played by the government, the institutions were created obeying a basic rule, which was
that the allocation of long term resources should be made through financial institutions
guided by a logic of private operation3 instead of the direct allocation of these resources
by the government. This period also saw the emergence of a series of development
banks in developing countries, notably in Asia.
From the moment when the principal development banks created during the twentieth
century became institutions that depended on public funding, it can be said that they
intermediated fiscal resources for the projects chosen, in other words, these institutions
could not be openly seen as banks, either because the funding was hegemonically public
or because the choices made involve criteria other than the pure and simple search for
profit. In fact these institutions sought to obtain positive externalities since projects
were chosen on the basis of broader criteria than profit alone.
3 By the logic of private operation, we want to refer not simply to the search for profit, but to the quest for efficiency that characterizes the concession of credit by a financial institution in comparison with loans made directly by the government.
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Since the 1980s a greater diversification of operations has been observed among these
institutions, as they moved away from being simply lenders to industry (Bruck, 2001, p.
131). Changes also occurred in the way that banks were financed, although government
funding continued being extremely important in the cases in question (Bruck, idem, p.
132).
Another aspect that needs to be mentioned is that in the post-war period development
banks became more important institutions in developing countries, in contrast with the
role they performed in the central countries. Also noted was a gradual move of
emphasis from base industries to technological modernization. This fact reflects,
without a doubt, a characteristic of these institutions, which is that they are accessories
to the development process. This is the reason why they have been losing importance in
central countries and are still essential in developing countries.
When the treatment given to development banks is observed in the literature, it is
noticeable that this type of institution is dealt with in an ad-hoc manner. In the literature
there is no generally accepted definition of development banks. The development bank
depends on where, when and for whom it is created.
One distinctive aspect of national development banks (NDB) is their direct or indirect
connection with the national economic development process, and more specifically with
the financing of this process. As a result a NDB can be said to be an institution that is
functional to national economic development.
These institutions have a pragmatic nature defined by the needs and limitations of the
economic development process in the countries where they were created. This means
that it is not possible to identify a unique model or a typical form of a NDB (Diamond,
1957).
Historically, it can be noted that both in the 1950s and the 2000s NDBs have been
marked by a strong heterogeneity in their forms of organization and action.
We can thus state that NDBs are idiosyncratic institutions designed to deal with specific
demands related to the economic development process. Therefore, they can be seen as
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financial institutions that reflect, in addition to the characteristics of national economic
development, the socio-political profile of the countries where they operate.
As a result in order to understand the nature of NDB these institutions have to be looked
at from a conceptual, historical and theoretical perspective.
First, it is important to note that these institutions (NDBs) are not always called
development banks. Furthermore, those that do bear this name can assume quite
distinctive forms of organization and operation in different countries and at different
times. This means that the elements that characterize a financial institution such as a
NDB have to be defined before we can proceed further.
It is also necessary to discuss the theoretical fundaments that justify the existence and
the role of NDBs in market economies during the different stages of economic
development.
Something else that also has to be asked is what defines a financial institution such as a
NDB. This discussion turns into a debate about the different experiences of financing
development, since NDBs do not converge on a standard or typical operational model.
These institutions do not have typical operations in regard to assets (the way resources
are invested) and much less in regard to liabilities (the forms of funding) which allow
the definition of a pattern of how these banks operate as instruments of development
policy.
As a result the discussion of the typical functions of a NDB revolves around the types of
operations and services carried out by NDBs or by financial institutions that in
retrospect are shown to be functional to achieving some stage of economic development
in their countries of development, as was specifically the case of some private banks
during the period between the Industrial Revolution and the First World War.
Therefore, the origin of NDBs can be found in the first half of the nineteenth century,
although only after the Second World War would these institutions predominantly
become governmental banks.
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The usual concept of development banks found in the literature and applicable to the
institutions existing until the period before the Second World War – i.e., an institution
that stimulates and provides finance to companies in the private sector (cf. Diamond,
1957) – includes any type of institution (and not just banks) that has the function of
stimulating and financing private sector companies, but not governmental ones. The
exclusion of the government as the possible client of these institutions is justified in an
essentially empirical form (Diamond, idem).
Even though it was based on inferences that are strictly empirical, this concept was
altered in the post-Second World War period in order to include institutions that were
predominantly governmental – notably in developing countries – and concerned with
the provision of financing for large companies, including here large state companies.
In the attempt to construct a definition of a NDB that can be somewhat general it is
important to note that one principal criteria for the functionality of a NDB is identified
with the granting of long term credit (UN-Desa, 2005, p. 9; Aghion, 1999, p. 83). This
criteria is based, even if implicitly, on the understanding that there exist specific
financial difficulties in the development process, especially associated with the scarcity
of long term credit, the overcoming of which requires the creation of specialized
financial institutions.
Another element that has to be taken into account in the definition of a NDB
emphasizes the role of these institutions in the choice of adequate criteria for the
selection of investment projects to be financed, or even in the formulation of these
projects. In this way the NDB takes a step beyond the provision of financing per se, and
comes to include the function of identifying the difficulties and opportunities in the
development process, as well as the investments capable of generating positive
externalities with an economic and social nature for this process (cf. Panizza et al.,
2004, p. 16; UN-Desa, idem, PP. 10-11; Pena, 2001, PP. 11-13).
Finally, institutional and political relations with the government have to be taken into
account as a distinctive element of NDBs.
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Based on the above, a concept of NDBs can be established that is functional to the
discussion of the functionality of rules such as Basel (I and II) for these institutions. In
first place it is important to note that the literature identifies two types of focus for
NDBs: one is more restricted, in which NDBs only carry out the role of a financial
institution, while the other is broader and sees NDBs as a broader type of institution
with multiple functions associated with the development process.
In the restricted focus the NDB assumes an essentially passive posture in relation to the
development process, and acts as a bank whose basic function is to meet the demand for
funds generated spontaneously by investments that have already been made and which
are not satisfactorily responded to by the financial system. In this scenario long term
financing is the principal function of a NDB.
In the broader focus (Bruck, 2001 and 2002; Pena, 2001; UN-Desa, 2005) the functions
of the NDB go beyond meeting this repressed demand, and also involve forms of
responding to the development process that are more active. In this vision a NDB
should anticipate demand, identifying new sectors, activities, products and/or strategic
productive processes for national development and generating programs (which may or
may not be prepared by NBDs themselves) for investment in these areas.
Clearly the second focus has been shown to be more appropriate, taking into account the
fact that the development process is dynamic by nature, altering over time to
accommodate the needs for investment and the opportunities that can be exploited.
It can also be noted that in the more restricted approach the NDB acts in a pro-cyclical
form with the same dynamic as a private bank, which as a principal does not have any
commitment to supporting economic development. Therefore, in the recessive phases of
economic activity the functionality of the restricted NDB is seriously compromised. As
a result it is desirable that a development institution should have an anti-cyclical role,
providing a counterweight to the loss of dynamism in private investments instead of
sanctioning them.
Therefore, the broader and more diversified the role expected from a NDB in the
national development process, the closer will be the political and financial ties with the
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government, and probably the greater will be the participation of the latter in the bank’s
capital.
It should be noted that among the NDBs created in the post-Second World War phase in
developing countries those with full governmental capital predominated (Aghion, idem,
p. 87). In these cases the NDB simultaneously acts as a bank that provides credit and an
agent that promotes development, also assuming macroeconomic functions, such as the
planning, formulation and/or implementation of national policies.
Thus, it is not just the focus on long term financing or the financing of sectors that are
important for economic development in a determined period that distinguishes a NDB
from other types of institution. It is the commitment to financial support for the national
economic development process that differentiates a NDB from other institutions that
can exercise this function. It can be concluded that the predominance of the public
sector in the structure of capital and as a result in the management of the NDB itself is
not a mere historic detail that emerged in the post-war period, but has to be considered
as one of the defining aspects of this type of institution.
Looking at the experiences of development banks in both developed and developing
countries, it can be seen that various different models exist in relation to the investment
of resources, the sources of financing and risk management. On the one hand there is
the German model – notably KfW – which points to a central model of a large banking
group with a number of different segments acting in an articulated way, though focused
on the differentiated objectives and target publics, observing a unified
direction/coordination of financial policy and risk management.
On the other hand there is the Mexican model which is organized around a set of
banking institutions that operate in differentiated segments in the financial market,
without having a unified coordination and direction, in other words without an
integrated management of financial resources or risk administration.
In relation to the sources of financing for NDB, in general these seek to obtain funds
from capital markets and governmental transfers from budgetary sources, as well as
operations with their own funds obtained principally from their own profits. In a small
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number of cases savings and cash deposits are obtained directly. Institutional reputation,
allied to governmental guarantees and the good evaluations of rating agencies, favor
NDB financing in developed countries by means of the launching of securities in
international capital markets. Nonetheless, the observation of the experiences of
developed and developing countries does not allow us define a single financing model
for these institutions.
In terms of the investment of resources the principal focus of NDB activities is aimed at
industrial projects, small and mid-sized companies, new businesses, technological
innovation, agriculture and housing. Investment policies are very diversified, combining
the offer of short and long term credit, investment in public and private securities, the
holding of shares, and the granting of guarantees and sureties.
Risk management services, in turn, are not provided by a large majority of institutions.
One exception is KfW, which uses Value at Risk type models (VaR) associated with
test periods (back testing and stress testing).
2.2. Development banks and the role of the state in the financial market
The analysis of the historical experiences of development banks becomes confused with
the discussion about the role of the state and public banks in the financial market. The
emergence of these institutions, thus, starts with the consensus that some type of
government intervention in the financial market should exist, in order to increase its
efficiency in the allocation of resources and to reduce the level of risk to which financial
institutions are exposed and in the ultimate instance to favor economic development.
As a result, the constitution of public banks – including development banks – is seen as
one of the ways that the state can act in financial markets, but not the only one. Other
alternatives are market supervision; the contracting of private services by the
government; the formulation of financial policies with specific objectives aimed at the
financial market or for selected productive sectors, or a combination of these forms.
The principal justification of the state’s actions in the financial market is based on two
distinct approaches: (a) the market failure model; and the (b) Post-Keynesian model.
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The market failure approach starts with the criticism of the hypothesis that markets –
whether financial or not – are efficient. Market failures are seen as transitory or
permanent conditions that prevent the efficient operation of some markets and, thus,
prevent the prices and volumes traded from reflecting the relevant set of information
about the benefits, costs and risks that guide the behavior of supply and demand.
In this approach financial markets are characterized as markets where asymmetrical
information exists and in which imperfect competition rules, amongst other market
failures. In this environment risk evaluation and compensation difficulties will exist,
especially in the case of the capital market, regarding long term credit in general and
credit for small and mid-sized companies, as well as for the financing of R&D and
investment in innovation. It is as a form of supplanting these problems that the need
emerges for the state to intervene in these markets (Sobreira, 2005).
According to this approach it is possible to implement proposals with a more
interventionist nature, basically in the form of directed credit policies, supported by
public resources and the creation of development banks and public banks in general.
Nevertheless, also according to this approach, development banks in particular do not
figure as explicitly recommended forms of action (Stiglitz, 1998, p. 9). Even so it is
possible to justify the actions of public banks based on the credit rationing model –
which results from the assistance of asymmetrical information and the limited risk
propensity of banks. Under these conditions credit incentive policies for groups
suffering from rationing can be implemented through public banks.
The Post-Keynesian focus is similar in part to the market failure approach, but by
emphasizing uncertainty in the trading of rights over future income – and, therefore,
emphasizing the fact that at the moment when the financial decision has to be taken
some relevant information simply does not exist and what is in play is not a problem of
the cost of or access to information – it affirms that there is no guarantee of the efficient
allocation of resources (Kregel, 1980).
As a result the resources developed by dealing with uncertainty and its effects on the
financial market have limited effectiveness, maintaining the condition of the
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inefficiency of the financial market from the micro-economic point of view. In this way
individual attempts at protection become the source of macroeconomic inefficiency.
According to this focus this fact justifies the regular actions of the government in the
financial market in order to reduce macroeconomic instability, thereby reducing the
level of uncertainty that affects the financial market, and controlling the financial
fragility of the system and finally by containing the short-term tendency of the financial
market (Carvalho, 1996; Studart, 1996). Also justified is the regular action of public and
development banks as forms of expanding the macroeconomic efficiency of the
financial market.
This is due to the fact that the government is subject to the same information limitations
associated with uncertainty that hinder the calculation of the probability of the success
of certain ventures by the private sector. In these cases the only form of compensating
the incompleteness of the financial market in the sectors most affected by uncertainty is
for the government to directly assume the risk that the private sector prefers not to.
One of the principal functions of development banks in this focus is the assumption of
risks in sectors with important positive externalities for economic development. This
function implies two important differences between development banks and private
financial institutions in relation to the administration of risks. First, development banks
need to develop risk control strategies distinct from those used in the private sector,
since the nature of these risks is different in the two types of institution. Second,
development banks should be submitted to distinct rules of prudential risk control.
It is also worth noting that more indirect forms of state action in the financial market are
advocated by a group of theories that suggest market freedom (financial liberalization
theories), according to which the state should act to reduce market failures and the level
of uncertainty that affect financial markets to inoffensive levels. This is the case of
prudential regulation policies aimed at the reduction of systemic risk.
2.3. Development banks: some concepts
Based on the elements presented in the two previous sections, it is possible to advance a
concept of development banks. As has already been noted, this is not intended to be a
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general theory, but rather is necessary to allow a discussion of the risks associated with
the operations of these institutions and the adequacy of implementing the rules of Basel
II by these banks.
Development banks can be classified as one of two types: in the first type the
development bank is merely seen as a financial institution. In the second it is seen as a
hybrid institution, with multiple functions associated with the development process.
According to the more restricted focus the development bank assumes a passive posture
in relation to the development process, acting as a bank whose function is to meet the
demand for funds spontaneously generated by ongoing investment and not met in any
satisfactory form by the existing financial system. This is typically the focus of market
failures as presented above. In this case the financing of repressed demand by long term
credit is the principal function of a development bank.
In the broader focus (Bruck, 2001 e 2002; Pena, 2001; UN-Desa, 2005), development
banks participate more actively in the development process. These institutions anticipate
demand, identifying new sectors, activities, products and/or strategic productive
processes for national development and generating programs (whether or not they are
prepared by the bank) for investment in these areas.
Furthermore, in the more restricted focus, the development bank – despite the fact that it
complies with the requirement of functionality for economic development – ends up
acting in a pro-cyclical form with the same dynamics as a private bank. Therefore, its
operations expand during expansive phases of the economic cycle and contract during
recessive phases.
According to this focus the functionality of development banks during contracting
phases is seriously compromised. It is in this phase when the estimated risk of new
investments is elevated, at the same time that the incentive for the assumption of risks
falls. Therefore, the role of a development bank becomes of extreme importance.
What is desirable is that the development bank plays an anti-cyclical role, i.e., that it is
capable of counterbalancing the loss of dynamism of private investment, notably the
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most innovative investment. In other words, it is up to development banks not only to
meet the already existing demand for long term funds not met by the financial system,
but also to stimulate new demand through the implementation of investment stimulation
programs in sectors considered to be strategic.
In these cases the development bank acts simultaneously as a bank that provides credit
and as an agent that promotes development, also assuming functions of a
macroeconomic nature – planning, the formulation and/or implementation of national
policy. These functions are difficult, if not impossible, for private financial institutions
to implement, thus the predominance of government capital is naturally imposed in this
case.
Therefore, it is not only the focus on long-term financing, or the financing of important
sectors for economic development in a determined period, that distinguishes a
development bank from other types of financial institutions. It is the commitment of
financial aid to the national economic development process that differentiates it from
other institutions which might come to exercise this function. As a result the
predominance of the public sector in the structure of capital and, consequently, in the
management of development banks is not a mere historical detail, but is something that
has to be considered as one of the defining aspects of this type of institution.
3. Basel II
When prudential regulation behavior is analyzed it can be noted that this fundamentally
applies to commercial banks, in other words to those institutions that operate the
payment system.
The Basle Agreement (Basle 1) was a response to a belief that the principal threat to the
stability of the banking system came from credit risks accepted especially, but not
exclusively, by US banks. The focus of Basle 1 was precisely credit risks and its main
form of action was imposing the creation of a minimum level of owned capital
proportional to the exposure of the bank to credit risks.
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Basle 1 functioned in an adequate manner if we consider that its aim was to equalize the
competitive conditions of internationally active banks in relation to the costs of
obedience to the regulations. Any other lens through which Basle 1 is analyzed shows
an agreement that is quite unsatisfactory in its terms. Both as the codifier of prudential
practices and as the inducer of advances in the risk administration methods used by
banks, Basle 1 did not reach a minimum level of efficiency.
As a piece of prudential regulation, the agreement is flawed, since the risk categories -
0%, 25%, 50% and 100% - are excessively broad. As an inducer of improvements in the
methods of risk administration the agreement is, in the best of hypotheses, innocuous.
This is because there is no stimulus for banks to invest resources in their own models of
risk contention, since this will not result in any alteration in relation to the capital that
the institution should accumulate, because the risk classification is given externally to
the bank.
Basel II, in contrast, was designed with another philosophy, which was to encourage the
regulated institutions to adopt more advanced methods of risk administration. For this
reason it was decided that the new regulation system should operate through the
creation of incentives for the adoption of more advanced methods of risk management,
similar to those of the market. Therefore, for the three risks which Basel II is concerned
with – credit, market and operational – alternative adjustment possibilities are defined
depending on the investment each bank makes in its own measurement and risk control
models. The expectation is that more sophisticated methods of measurement and risk
control will lead to the creation of ever smaller coefficients of capital, allowing the most
advanced institutions to save capital.
The main purpose of Basel II is not, however, the adoption of specific models of risk
administration, but rather the creation of incentives that can induce banks, at their own
decision, to seek continuous improvements in their methods of dealing with the
problem. Basel II, thus proposes the objective of molding the operation of financial
markets in such a way that banking institutions seek at their own initiative and interest
to reduce their exposure to credit, market and operational risks.
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4. Basel II and development banks
As noted in Section 2, development banks cannot be characterized in a satisfactory
manner in a general definition. Nonetheless, it is possible to identify some of their
characteristics that can be found with reasonable frequency.
The principal characteristic is the mission of providing long term loans to finance
investment in companies. This mission is justified by the fact that many economies do
not have long term financing channels for productive investment, as well as by the
reluctance of private financial institutions to provide finance for investments that can
generate positive externalities for the economy or for activities in which the presence of
significant economies of scale require that investments be made on a large scale.
Since these are the principal activities of a typical development bank, the principal risks
involved in its operations are credit and operational risks. For this reason Basle I and
Basel II can in principle serve as guides for the formulation of risk administration
policies by this type of institution.
Nonetheless, as has already been noted, Basle I did not have the intention of promoting
the improvement of risk administration methods in financial institutions in general.
Thus, development banks do not come under the definition of internationally active
banks, the object of the 1988 agreement, nor do they operate in competition with these
banks.
In relation to Basel II, development banks are not authorized to accept deposits and as
such are not subject to systemic risks, a fact that makes Basel II in principle innocuous
for these institutions. On the other hand, as a credit risk administration instrument, the
provisions of Basel II are at the same time both complex and simplistic, since they do
not propose alternatives for the measurement and administration of credit risk,
validating only the existing models.
It should also be observed that the capital of the majority of development banks consists
of funds with a public origin. As a result increasing capital is a fiscal problem, not a
capital market one. The limits of these institutions are not a decline in the private
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evaluation of their perspectives, but a possible refusal by fiscal authorities to increase
their capital, which can result from many factors that have nothing to do with the
vulnerability of the institution, not only credit risks, but also market and operational
ones.
Another aspect refers to the fact that Basle supposes that the administration of the bank
can determine its asset policy, both in terms of the resources looked for and in terms of
the risks incurred. Basle, by imposing limits, sought to operate precisely through these
decisions. As a result, its application to development banks supposes that the directors
of these institutions are capable of determining autonomously the profile of acquired
assets in relation both to return and risk. This, however, is not the case for many
development banks, whose asset policy is circumscribed by economic policy decisions
taken at higher levels of power, or are contained in the statutes. In this case Basel II
does not contribute to improving the risk administration of the institution.
Basel I is notoriously unsatisfactory as a set of guidelines for the prudential regulation
of the entire banking sector. Both as a codifier of prudential practices and as a
stimulator of advances in the methods of risk administration by banks, Basel I fails to
meet its objectives.
As an attempt at prudential regulation the agreement fails by working with risk
categories that are excessively broad. As a stimulator of improvements in risk
administration methods the agreement fails by setting capital coefficients in accordance
with the application structure of each bank, irrespective of the efficiency with which its
risks are measured and controlled. In this way there is no stimulus for banks to invest
resources in a better risk management, since this will not result in any alteration in the
capital that the institution has to accumulate since risk classification is given externally
to the bank.
Basel II, in contrast, was effectively designed as a type of prudential regulation. Its
central objective was to encourage the regulated institutions to adopt more advanced
methods of risk administration, based on the hypothesis that banks with better
administered risk have a lower possibility of suffering shocks that can threaten their
solvency and indirectly the normal operation of the payment system of the economy.
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For this reason the Basel Committee decided that the new regulation system should
operate through the creation of incentives for the adoption of more advanced methods of
risk management similar to those of the market. For the three risks with which Basel II
is concerned – credit, market and operational risks – alternative adaptation policies are
defined depending on the investment of each bank in risk administration techniques.
Thus, the agreement aims to minimize the actions of the actual market and avoids
imposing unique methods for the calculation of capital coefficients in favor of economic
stimulation to encourage banks to adopt advanced methods of risk administration and
measurement. It was expected that this would lead to the setting of ever lower capital
coefficients, allowing the more advanced institutions to economize capital.
Basel II, thus, tries to be market friendly, operating on the basis of incentives rather than
authority. Therefore, the main purpose of Basel II is not the donation of specific risk
administration models, but rather the creation of incentives that will induce banks, by
their own decisions, to seek a continuous improvement in their methods of dealing with
the problem. Basel II, thus, proposes to mould the operation of financial markets so that
banking institutions, at their own initiative and in their own interest, seek to reduce their
exposure to credit, market and operational risks.
In relation to the application of Basel II to development banks, it is important to note
that although it is not possible to describe this institution in a satisfactory way in a
single general definition, it is possible to identify some characteristics that appear to be
found with a certain frequency, even in cases that in other aspects seem to be very
diverse.
The most fundamental of these characteristics seems to be the mission of providing long
term loans to finance investment in companies. If this is the principal function of
development banks, the principal risks involved in their operations are certainly credit
and operational risks. Nevertheless, Basel I and II, especially the latter, can in principle
serve as guidelines for the formulation of risk administration policies by this type of
institution.
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Nonetheless, as has already been noted, Basel I did not have any intention of really
promoting an improvement in the methods of risk administration in financial institutions
in general. Development banks do not fit into the definition of internationally active
banks, nor do they compete with this type of bank. In fact NDBs generally do not
compete with the banking system, whether international or local, since the latter does
not usually provide long term loans, except when there are fundraising sources for
equally long periods.
Basel II, on the other hand, is a instrument of prudential regulation because it is
concerned with the prevention of systemic crises, i.e., with the possibility that the
bankruptcy of a large-scale bank can interrupt the payment system. Development banks
are not in general authorized to accept deposits, which means that their operations do
not involve systemic risks. As an instrument of credit risk administration, on the other
hand, its provisions are at the same time both complex and simplistic. Basel II does not
really indicate the best alternatives for the measurement and administration of credit
risks, it only validates the models that are already being used.
An essential element of Basel is the introduction of market discipline, not just through
pillar three of Basel II, but also in Basel I. The market is supposed to ‘punish’ banks
that are exposed to assets seen as excessively risky because the expansion of banks’
balances is only possible through the addition raising of capital, giving investigators the
chance to express their dissatisfaction with the policy of these institutions through the
refusal to purchase securities or the imposition of punitive contractual terms. Under
Basel I this mechanism only functioned in the case of banks seeking to expand their
assets, since the weighting of risks is already fixed. Under Basel II alterations in the
risks associated with each type of asset can lead a more exposed bank to demand more
capital, even if the size of its balance remains unaltered. As a result market discipline
has to be felt in a more effective manner in the case Basel II than under Basel I,
irrespective of the fact that it is also considered to be a specific ‘pillar’. Nevertheless,
the capital of the majority of development banks is based on funds with a public origin.
Increasing capital is a fiscal problem not a capital market one. Thus, the limits of these
institutions are not the deterioration of the private evaluation of their prospects, but a
possible refusal on the part of fiscal authorities to increase their capital, which can occur
as a result of many factors that have nothing to do with the vulnerability of the
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institution, not just credit risks, but also market and operational risks, or any other type
of risk when relevant.
Finally Basel supposes that the administration of the bank can determine its asset
policy, both in relation to the returns sought and the risks incurred. The limits imposed
by Basel seek to operate precisely through these decisions. Their application to
development banks naturally supposes that the boards of these institutions are capable
of determining autonomously the profile of assets acquired in relation to both returns
and risks. In many cases, however, the actions of development banks have a more
executive character, with their asset policy being circumscribed by both economic
policy decisions taken at higher levels of power and by statutory determination. In this
case, as in the case of market discipline, the rules of Basel do not really contribute to the
improvement of the institution’s risk administration.
The most important factor to be considered is the particularity of the functions of
development banks. Their operational logic is not the same as the private financial
sector, even when the question of systemic risk is not taken into consideration. In
practically all experiences their creation is due to the incapacity of the private financial
sector to provide the same services. Consequently the limits that apply to their activities
cannot be the same as those applicable to ordinary commercial banks. On the other
hand, their nature as state bodies suggests that events that can compromise their
capacity to properly exercise the functions for which they were designed can be more
important than risks that threaten the bankruptcy of the institutions. Therefore, political
risks, in other words the risk that an institution will suffer undue interference in carrying
out its mission, can be more important than credit risks for example, since solvency is
guaranteed by state decision rather than the economic conditions in which development
banks operate.
5. Conclusion
The application of the rules of Basel II – or even Basle I – to development banks finds a
serious obstacle in the particularity of the functions of these institutions.
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Their operational logic is not the same as the private financial sector, nor are these
institutions subject to the occurrence of systemic risk, therefore the application of the
agreement rules to them is not relevant.
The limits applied to the activities of these institutions cannot be the same as applied to
commercial banks. Furthermore, their nature as state bodies – and not as banks –
suggests that more important than risks that can threaten to bankrupt the institution are
events that compromise their capacity to exercise the functions for which they were
designed.
6. References
Bruck, N. (2001a). Development banking concepts and theory. In ADFIAP-IDF.
Principles and practices of development banking. Manila, Philippines: ADFIAP-IDF,
vol. 1, pp. 9-39
Bruck, N. (2001b). How development banks are changing. In ADFIAP-IDF. Principles
and practices of development banking. Manila, Philippines: ADFIAP-IDF, vol. 1, pp.
131-137
Carvalho, F. (1996). Financial innovation and the Post Keynesian approach to “the
process of capital formation”. Rio de Janeiro, IE-UFRJ, Texto para Discussão # 380.
Diamond, W. (1957). Development banks. Johns Hopkins Press.
Kregel, J. (1980). Markets and institutions as features of a capitalist production system.
Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Fall, 3(1), pp. 32-48.
Pena, A. (2001). Principles of development banking. In ADFIAP-IDF. Principles and
practices of development banking. Manila, Philippines: ADFIAP-IDF, vol. 2, pp. 9-46.
Sobreira, R. (2005). Eficiência, desregulamentação financeira e crescimento econômico.
In Sobreira, R. (org.). Regulação financeira e bancária. São Paulo: Atlas.
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Stiglitz, J. (1998). The role of the financial system in development. World Bank.
Mimeo.
Studart, R. (1996). The efficiency of financial systems, liberalization, and economic
development. Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Winter, 18(2), pp. 269-292.
UN-DESA (2005). Rethinking the role of National Development Banks. New York:
UN-DESA, December.
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