The Design of Financial Systems for the • Newly Emerging Democracies of Eastern Europe
Joseph Stiglitz
No 294669, Institute for Policy Reform Archive from Institute for Policy Reform
Abstract:
Appropriately designed capital markets are important in sustaining reforms in developing • countries, and in the newly emerging democracies of Eastern Europe. Understanding capital markets involves understanding the links and distinctions between the two functions in which capital markets engage: intertemporal trade and risk spreading. Capital markets are different from ordinary markets, which involve the contemporaneous trade of commodities, since in capital markets money today is exchanged for a (often vague) promise of money in • the future. This distinction plays an important role in explaining why capital markets cannot be, and are not run as, conventional auction markets, and why as a result there may be credit (and equity) rationing. The economic theory of financial markets is applied to five problems particular to the transition of the emerging democracies of Eastern Europe: (i) the establishment of a "hard" budget constraint in financial institutions, (ii) the creation of new institutions, (iii) the problem of inherited loan portfolios, (iv) the introduction of • competition in the financial sector, and (v) the relationship between finance and corporate control.
Keywords: Industrial Organization; International Development (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 46
Date: 1991-09
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Working Paper: The Design of Financial Systems for the • Newly Emerging Democracies of Eastern Europe (1991) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ags:inpora:294669
DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.294669
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