FRBSF Economic Letter
97-22; August 8, 1997
Banking System Developments in the Four Asian Tigers
Pacific Basin Notes. This series appears on an occasional
basis. It is prepared under the auspices of the Center
for Pacific Basin Monetary and Economic Studies within the FRBSF's
Economic Research Department.
Over the past 30 years, Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan have
had remarkably rapid and sustained economic growth, earning the nickname
the four tigers. Because of the new investment opportunities they provide
and because their experiences may offer lessons for less developed economies,
they have attracted considerable attention from the financial and policy
communities, as well as from economists who have renewed interest in research
in theories of economic growth.
Despite their physical proximity and shared economic vigor, there are
some notable differences among the tigers. For instance, Hong Kong and
Singapore are cities with limited resources, whereas Korea and Taiwan
are economies with relatively large populations and more diverse industrial
structures. This Economic Letter focuses mainly on the differences
in the way the private financial sectors were used to pursue industrialization
and export growth in these economies, with special attention paid to the
banking sector.
Exports led economic growth
Of the four tigers, Korea is the most populous, with about 45 million
people, and it is the largest economy; its GDP was $378 billion in 1994
(by comparison, U.S. GDP was $6.6 trillion). Taiwan's GDP is about two-thirds
the size of Korea's, with about half the population. Hong Kong and Singapore
are by far the smallest tigers.
All four economies started out poor in all areas except potential labor
supply before they began to grow in the 1960s. Though the exact timing
of the beginning of rapid growth differs from economy to economy, the
track records for the previous three decades have been spectacular. For
all four, average income per capita grew 6 to 7% a year since 1965, resulting
in about fivefold increases by 1994, which ranged from $8,260 for Korea
to $22,500 for Singapore. While they account for roughly 1% of the world's
population, the four economies produced about 3% of global goods and services
in 1994. This share of world output might not appear significant compared
to economies like Japan (18% with about 2.3% of world population) and
the U.S. (26% with about 4.6% of world population), but the relative share
of the four economies in the global trade is more impressive. Exports
from the four economies together made up over 10% of the world's total
exports, only slightly less than the U.S. in 1994, compared to only about
2.5% in 1971 (Glick and Moreno 1997). The relative shares of imports were
about the same.
These numbers make it clear that external trade has been an important
element in the development of these economies. The external sector (imports
plus exports), measured relative to total GDP, represented 52% in Korea,
73% in Taiwan, 240% in Hong Kong, and 280% in Singapore in 1994 (for the
U.S., by comparison, it was 17%).
As the four economies have matured, the composition of exports has evolved;
inparticular, they have started to export more sophisticated manufactured
products, such as machinery and equipment (Rose 1997). This shift in the
composition of exports reflected a major shift in the industrial landscape
of these economies. Such transformations required financial resources.
The need was particularly acute since all of these economies had only
very small rudimentary financial systems in 1970.
Financing the export drive: Different approaches
With the exception of Hong Kong, the governments of these economies
took very active roles in mobilizing savings and financing industrialization
efforts. Savings were encouraged through various incentives as well as
by government mandate. The most prominent example is Singapore, where
the government encouraged high private savings through mandatory provident
fund contributions by both employers and employees. (A member of the provident
fund could use savings for housing, education, medical care, or retirement.)
Though less formal and limited in scope, the governments of Korea and
Taiwan also operated various specialized saving vehicles. Using these
resources, all three governments established government-owned development
banks and various special funds for the purposes of channeling credit
to targeted areas of industrialization. Heavy emphasis was put on promoting
export-oriented manufacturing sectors, as well as investing in large infrastructure
projects.
Commercial banks also played a critical role, because they were the
major source of private savings. In Korea and Taiwan, the governments
required commercial banks to extend credit towards industries targeted
in the governments development plans. Furthermore, due to regulated loan
rates, which were below market-determined interest rates, and the lack
of loanable funds, these loans were offered at very favorable lending
rates.
In Korea, about 54% of total bank loans went to the manufacturing sector,
the crown jewel of the economy in 1980. By 1990, this share had fallen
to a still substantial 44%. At the same time, the manufacturing sector's
contribution to GDP was about 30% in both years (Nam 1995). This general
emphasis on the manufacturing sector has persisted, even though in the
early 1980s the Korean government discontinued an ambitious policy to
create large heavy and chemical industries and had to address related
banking sector problems with a massive credit infusion. In Taiwan, the
pattern was similar: in 1980 more than 70% of loans went to the manufacturing
sector, and in 1990 it fell to 57%, while manufacturing output contributed
48 and 44% to the GDP in the same two years (Shea 1995).
In Singapore, the government directed credit to the targeted industrial
sectors via state- owned institutions but did not use regulation of the
banking sector to do so. In 1990, lending to manufacturing, which accounted
for about 30% of GDP, made up only 13% of commercial bank loans and advances.
This figure has been typical since the early 1970s. Singapore decided
early on to promote itself as a key regional financial center, taking
advantage of its location as a major transshipment port and hence a potential
hub of commerce. Accordingly, controls on interest rates, foreign capital,
and entry barriers in banking were abolished in the 1970s. (In comparison,
removal of these controls is still being carried out piecemeal in Korea
and Taiwan.) Although Singapore still strictly limits offshore transactions
on its currency, it has allowed liberal international financing operations
for both domestic and foreign financial institutions. Perhaps policymakers
realized the necessity of guaranteeing transparent and unencumbered operations
of commercial banks for fostering a vibrant financial sector.
Hong Kong's case differs dramatically from the other three because the
government did not direct funding of the industrial sector and stayed
out of decisions on the relationship between the two sectors. Basically,
the Hong Kong government adhered to maintaining the rule of law and did
not intervene in most facets of economic activity.
Despite such disparate arrangements between the industrial and financial
sectors, the four tigers collectively achieved remarkable growth, raising
the question of whether the structure of the financial sector really matters
much for growth. However, the very recent experiences of the four economies
offers a hint that financial repression might adversely affect the health
of an economy.
At the crossroads
The pace of growth of the four economies slowed in the second half of
1996 when they were hit by a common adverse terms-of-trade shock. The
price of computer memory chips--the new holy grail for these and other
east Asian economies--fell precipitously.
The resulting cyclical slowdown was largest in Korea. Starting early
this year, several large businesses, many of which had expanded rapidly
into many different areas of specialization, either went bankrupt or experienced
financial difficulties. As it turns out, many were so heavily leveraged
that GDP growth of 5 to 6% in real terms was not enough to generate sufficient
cash flow to service their debt.
These financial problems were transmitted directly to the Korean banking
sector, since commercial as well as state-run banks have been the main
source of funds for these businesses. Indeed, many of these loans were
made on the basis of whether a company was in a strategic industry rather
than whether the loan made sense from a business perspective. For example,
a former executive of a bank was called to a special hearing after a steel
company had gone bankrupt; when asked why his bank had extended so much
credit to the firm, he said he approved the loans because steel is an
important national strategic industry. Recent experiences show that promoting
shareholders interests and lending money based on profitability have not
yet taken a firm hold in the Korean banking sector, even though ten years
have passed since the government completed de jure privatization of all
major commercial banks by selling off the majority shares it had held.
As a result, the borrowing costs of many Korean financial institutions
have risen noticeably in international capital markets since the beginning
of this year. This has been an unwelcome development for most banks, since
they already had experienced some deterioration last year in their performance,
as measured by the rate of return on assets.
In Taiwan, efforts to modernize the financial sector appear to have made
slow progress. Although a substantial number of private banks have started
up since 1991, most banks are still owned by central or local governments.
Government ownership, however, does not seem to be a guarantee of a good
credit standing. Moody's lowered its financial strength rating of a couple
of major commercial banks in Taiwan early this spring, citing their high
bad loan ratios. The plan to privatize them has been postponed on several
occasions. In addition, the lack of standard accounting practices has
not helped: commercial banks had only partial control in the lending decisions,
so reliable accounting information, which is needed to gauge a project's
profitability, had not been important in the past (Shea 1995).
Under such circumstances, it may be understandable that banks impose
very stringent collateral requirements for the loans they make. This practice,
in turn, drives many firms with inadequate collateral to informal financial
markets where they face added borrowing costs, close to 10% above bank
rates (Shea 1995).
Yet another lesson?
In 1994, the manufacturing sector accounted for about 31% and 27% of
GDP in Taiwan and Korea, respectively, whereas banking and financial services
accounted for 18% and 17%. In contrast, the relative shares of the manufacturing
and financial sectors were 28% and 27% for Singapore and 9% and 27% for
Hong Kong. These figures seem to reflect the emphases of the past development
policies. The financial system was rather the accommodator of this real
economic performance than its instigator, wrote one economist after examining
the role of the financial sector in economic development experiences of
these economies (Patrick, 1994). Recent banking sector developments in
Korea and, to a lesser extent, Taiwan point to the negative side-effects
that government direction of credit to preferred industries can have in
the long run. Singapore's experience seems to suggest that a government
could implement industrial development policies without directing the
credit decisions of the commercial banking sector. Finally, Hong Kong's
case seems to illustrate that an active industrial policy may not be essential
for rapid economic development.
Chan Huh
Economist
References
Glick, R., and R. Moreno. 1997. "Government Intervention and the East
Asian Miracle." FRBSF Economic Letter 97-20 (July 11).
Nam, S. 1995. "Korean Financial Markets and Policies." In Financial
Sector Development in Asia. Asian Development Bank.
Patrick, H. 1994. "Comparison, Contrasts and Implications." In The
Financial Development of Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, H. Patrick and
Y.C. Park, eds. New York: Oxford University Press.
Rose, A. 1997. "Dynamic Measures of Competitiveness: Are the Geese Flying
in Formation?" FRBSF Economic Letter 97-17 (May 30).
Shea, J. 1995. "Financial Sector Development and Policies in Taipei,
China." In Financial Sector Development in Asia. Asian Development
Bank.
Opinions expressed in this newsletter do not necessarily reflect
the views of the management of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco,
or of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Editorial
comments may be addressed to the editor or to the author. Mail comments
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