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Private or Public? Financing Japan’s SMEs

Private or Public? Financing Japan’s SMEs. Ford Foundation Conference on Finance, Business Models, and Sustainable Prosperity Kay Shimizu Columbia University December 7, 2012. Puzzles about Japan. Source: OECD i -Library. Puzzles about Japan.

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Private or Public? Financing Japan’s SMEs

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  1. Private or Public? Financing Japan’s SMEs Ford Foundation Conference on Finance, Business Models, and Sustainable Prosperity Kay Shimizu Columbia University December 7, 2012

  2. Puzzles about Japan Source: OECD i-Library

  3. Puzzles about Japan • Low unemployment despite a major financial crisis in 1990 (Reinhart and Rogoff2008) • Continued domestic (and overseas) demand for Japanese government debt (Greenspan) • Continued deflation despite financial easing (Krugman, Posen 2012) • Middle risk gap (Schaede 2004)

  4. Private bank loans outstanding, by interest rate (Dec 2002)

  5. Bank and Non-bank loans outstanding, by interest rates, Dec 1998

  6. Risk averse by design • In the US or UK, markets used to price risk • Japan’s financial institutions designed to mitigate risk • No market for pricing risk • Local government bonds • SME finance

  7. Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) are high risk • Lack of information • Small by definition • More vulnerable

  8. Perceived credit accessLarge enterprises vs SMEs

  9. SMEs depend on debt financing • Average SME gets over 50% of capital in loans from financial institutions • Decline in loans from government affiliated financial institutions • The smaller (and more risky) the firm, the more it depends on borrowing • In 2001, firms with less than 20 employees received 66.9% of capital in loans • Firms with more than 300 employees received 24.2% of capital in loans

  10. Private banks finance SMEs in Japan • Private banks play a vital role (90.5% of loans) • In 1965, 41% of bank loans to SMEs • In 1997, 70% of bank loans to SMEs • In 2012, 68% of bank loans to SMEs • Regional banks dominate and also depend on SME loans for revenue • BUT, proper loans only to the most profitable SMEs (25.4% of SMEs in 2011)

  11. How do weaker SMEs access funds? • Credit guarantees use public funds to guarantee private bank loans • Not unique to Japan • Japan’s program features: • 100% coverage • Widespread use • 63.7% of SMEs have used CGs • 39.8% of SMEs using CGs in 2003 • 21.1% of all loans in Japan covered in 2010

  12. Credit guarantees make risk disappear

  13. Credit guarantees support the community

  14. Why do SMEs get protection? • Over 99% of Japan’s firms are SMEs • SMEs employ ~70% of workers • Japan has long systematically protected SMEs (Calder 1988) • In 1982, Japan’s public loans to SMEs 17.5 times that of the US • Effective organization • Vertical organization with access to national policy • Local mobilization influencing local policy

  15. Why do regional banks participate? • Regional banks depend on SMEs as main source of income • Regional banks have monopoly over local information • Relationship banking • Designated financial institution of local governments • Growing burdens for regional banks

  16. Credit guarantees disperse and postpone risk • Pools risk at the national level • Postpones risk to future generations • Politically viable though less effective • Decreased accountability • But multiplies funds while minimizing costs

  17. Default rate of Credit Gurantees

  18. Private money as public funds? • Credit guarantees release private money as public funds • Depositors shoulder the risk • Low returns • Which SMEs qualify for credit guarantees? • Analogous to welfare programs? • Unintended recipients?

  19. How institutional design deals with risk • Local government bonds • Spread on interest rates extremely narrow • Interest rates cannot reflect levels of risk • Emphasis on treating all localities equally

  20. May help explain puzzles about Japan • Why we observe a middle risk gap • Why unemployment remains low • Why start-ups and venture capital remain underdeveloped • Why risk capital is scarce

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