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The Role of State Owned Banks in Indonesia

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The World Bank, Jakarta, Indonesia. Slide 2. Indonesia's Financial Landscape Dec. 2003 ... SOBs always have and continue to play a major role in Indonesia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of State Owned Banks in Indonesia


1
The Role of State Owned Banks in Indonesia
  • Global Conference on
  • The Role of State-Owned Financial Institutions
    Policy and Practice
  • April 26-27, 2004, The World Bank
  • P.S Srinivas
  • Sector Coordinator
  • Finance Private Sector Development
  • The World Bank, Jakarta, Indonesia

2
Indonesias Financial Landscape Dec. 2003
US1 Rp. 8500
3
Role of Bank Indonesia
  • Evolution of SOBs strongly influenced by role of
    BI
  • BIs dual roles (until 1999)
  • Agent of government for development
  • Direct financing to public enterprises
  • Refinancing/special credit programs mainly to
    SOBs
  • Banking sector regulator/supervisor
  • Historic problems of weak supervision and
    enforcement especially of SOBs
  • Since 1999, BI independent, significantly
    improved regulation and supervision and more
    assertive in enforcement
  • However, for SOBs enforcement is still an issue

4
Overview of role of SOBs
5
Evolution of SOBs in Indonesia
  • Origins in the developmental view of state
    ownership
  • Instruments of state in promoting development
  • Each SOB assigned a specific sector of economy
  • BRI rural, BDN minerals, Exim
    export/import, BNI manufacturing
  • Transformed into political instruments
  • Directed credit to SOEs, politically connected
    groups
  • 1992 law removed all distinctions between SOBs
    and private banks, except for owner
  • Situation continues at present

6
Milestones in SOBs evolution - Prior to 1983
  • SOBs main channel of BIs liquidity credit
    programs
  • Lending at subsidized rates to qualified
    borrowers
  • In 1982, liquidity credits over 40 of total
    loans
  • Important part of overall development strategy
  • Recycling oil revenues
  • BI refinancing/state directed lending reduced
    need to
  • Mobilize deposits
  • Develop strong credit risk assessment skills

7
Milestones in SOBs evolution - 1983 reforms
  • First major financial sector reforms in Indonesia
  • Driven by BOP problems and weak fiscal situation
    after decline of oil prices
  • Main features
  • Reduction of subsidized directed credit programs
  • Deregulation of SOB deposit rates
  • Elimination of credit ceilings
  • Impact on SOBs
  • Increased attention to deposit-taking
  • Increased competition from private banks in
    lending
  • Shortcomings of reform
  • Continued presence of directed credit programs
  • Weak incentives for SOBs to improve credit risk
    assessment

8
Milestones in SOBs evolution- 1988-92 reforms
  • Key aspects
  • Entry of new private banks allowed
  • SOEs allowed to move deposits to private banks
  • Foreign exchange transactions rules changed
  • Directed credit programs further reduced
  • Mandatory subsidized credit insurance abolished
  • Risk based capital adequacy standards introduced
  • Impacts
  • Dramatic increase in competition for SOBs
  • No. of private banks from 77 (1988) to 206 (1994)
  • SOBs share of banking system assets from 2/3rds
    (1988) to 40 (1995)

9
Milestones1988-92 reforms (contd)
  • Liquidity credits from 41 (1982) to 28 (1989)
    to 13 (1991)
  • Liquidity credits (?), competition (?), and
    capital requirements (?) ? weak state of SOB
    balance sheets exposed
  • Government committed to recapitalize SOBs to full
    8 CAR by 1992
  • SOBs role as political instruments of state
  • Revelations of large scale SOB funding of
    politically connected projects and persons
  • Weak governance of SOBs exposed
  • Bank Indonesias weak supervision of SOBs
    highlighted

10
Milestones in SOBs evolution 1997/98 crisis
  • SOB loan portfolios deteriorating for some time
    prior to crisis
  • Serious SOB weaknesses known - Bapindo collapse
    (1993), BBD insolvency (mid 1997)
  • Other SOBs with impaired capital
  • Main cause lack of credit analysis
  • Politically motivated lending that went bad
  • Most SOBs found insolvent soon after crisis broke

11
Milestones1997/98 crisis (contd)
  • SOBs considered too big to fail
  • Four were merged into Bank Mandiri and
    recapitalized
  • Corporate loans of BRI also to Mandiri
  • Other three recapitalized
  • NPLs transferred to IBRA
  • High cost of recapitalizing SOBs
  • Total cost of banking crisis about 50 of GDP
  • About US50 billion of recap bonds provided to
    banking sector
  • SOBs accounted for about 40 of assets prior to
    crisis
  • Accounted for about 2/3rds of recap bonds
  • Bank Mandiri alone nearly 40 of total cost
  • Poor incentives due to too-big-to-fail
    consideration potentially increased recap cost

12
Current role of SOBs (Dec. 2003)
  • SOBs still major players in the banking sector
  • 28 of branches, 42 of deposits, 46 of assets,
    40 of loans of banking sector
  • Two largest SOBs nearly 1/3rd of banking system
  • Bank Mandiri 20, BNI 11 of assets
  • Partial privatization in last year
  • 30 of Bank Mandiri, 40.5 of BRI sold,
    Government has golden share
  • Government bonds major role in the system
    influences SOB performance
  • 30 of banking system assets
  • SOBs hold 60 of all government bonds
  • 40 of SOB assets
  • Improving reported indicators
  • Declining NPLs, improving CARs, increasing
    profitability
  • Large presence of government bonds and regulatory
    treatment of restructured loans potentially
    exaggerates soundness

13
Recent performance of SOBs Dec. 2003
14
How real are the reported numbers?
The largest SOBs continue to be potentially risky
15
Governance of SOBs
  • Continues to be key issue
  • Has been improving
  • Performance contracts and management changes in
    return for recapitalization
  • New and more professional Boards appointed
  • Closer monitoring by shareholder
  • Better supervision by BI
  • But much more is needed
  • Continuing weaknesses being exposed through
    scandals
  • BNI
  • BRI
  • Questionable credit decisions continue

16
What can be done going forward?
  • Should Indonesia continue having SOBs?
  • Partial privatization step forward, but
    inadequate
  • Especially with governments golden share
  • Full privatization would be idealbut
  • Unlikely to be politically feasible in short-run
  • Potential investors?
  • Options for the short run
  • Greater oversight by shareholder of SOBs
  • Increase accountability of SOBs to government
  • Closer attention to new loan origination
    especially corporate
  • Ensure compliance with corporate plans
  • More operational restructuring
  • Enhanced supervision and enforcement by BI
  • Make regulatory oversight of SOBs the same as
    private banks in practice

17
Main messages
  • SOBs always have and continue to play a major
    role in Indonesia
  • After an extremely expensive recapitalization,
    government/regulator has begun taking steps to
    improve operations/management/supervision of SOBs
  • Despite these measures, SOBs remain vulnerable to
    non-commercial pressures and continue to exhibit
    weaknesses in core banking areas
  • Full privatization should be the goal but
    further restructuring, improved governance also
    necessary
  • Key question Is government willing to give up
    political benefits of owning banks?
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