The role of commercial banks in enterprise restructuring in Central and Eastern Europe
Millard Long and
Izabela Rutkowska
No 1423, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank
Abstract:
Many countries in Eastern Europe assigned banks the responsibility for restructuring enterprises. Such restructuring had five components: 1) triage of enterprises into three classes -- viable, viable with debt relief, and nonviable; 2) work with management of overindebted firms on a restructuring plan before granting debt relief; 3) trigger the bankruptcy liquidation process on nonviable firms; 4) fund new investments needed as part of physical restructuring; and 5) provide corporate governance through representation on boards of directors. The initial information is that banks are performing these roles only to a limited degree. Signals are mixed on how vigorously governments want banks to pursue bankruptcy proceedings. With little opportunity to recover funds, banks are accepting even dubious restructuring programs from enterprises. But banks, except under government directive, are avoiding making new loans to loss-making enterprises. Together with a cut in fiscal subsidies, this is imposing a harder budget constraint on the enterprises. Non-viable enterprises seem more likely to starve to death than to die through execution. Corporate restructuring is not a normal part of commercial banking. To ask banks to restructure weak enterprises is to direct their attention away from what should be their core business: lending to strong enterprises. In fact, banks are under attack for being excessively conservative. Enterprise restructuring is taking place in Central and Eastern Europe driven by the disintegration of regional trade relations, sharply higher input prices, falling domestic demand, inflation, and other economic dislocations in combination with the harder budget constraint. Thus far the restructuring has been more downsizing than making new investments.
Keywords: Financial Crisis Management&Restructuring; Banks&Banking Reform; Payment Systems&Infrastructure; Municipal Financial Management; Financial Intermediation; Financial Intermediation; Environmental Economics&Policies; Banks&Banking Reform; Financial Crisis Management&Restructuring; Municipal Financial Management (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1995-02-28
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