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Preferences, Variance, and Politics of Multiple Lenders: The Case of Brazil

Preferences, Variance, and Politics of Multiple Lenders: The Case of Brazil. Ruth Ben-Artzi Department of Political Science Providence College Prepared for IPES, College Station, TX 11/14/09. RESEARCH QUESTION.

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Preferences, Variance, and Politics of Multiple Lenders: The Case of Brazil

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  1. Preferences, Variance, and Politics of Multiple Lenders: The Case of Brazil Ruth Ben-Artzi Department of Political Science Providence College Prepared for IPES, College Station, TX 11/14/09

  2. RESEARCH QUESTION IS THERE UTILITY IN HAVING MULTIPLE PUBLIC DEVELOPMENT BANKS SERVE THE SAME COUNTRY? CONSIDERATIONS: DO BANKS MAKE LOANS TO THE SAME SECTORS IN A GIVEN COUNTRY DO BANKS OF A DIFFERENT GLOBAL-STATE LEVEL HAVE DIFFERENT DECISION-MAKING CALCULUS

  3. THREE INSTITUTIONAL LEVELS • The world bank (WB) • Inter-American development bank (IDB) • Brazilian development bank (BNDES) All make project/program loans to Brazil

  4. WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT? • Countries spend billions of $ on aid • Is the (political) involvement of shareholders influential in different ways for the three institutional levels? • No study of how different multilateral financial institutions (that aid the same country) compare to each other • Who benefits from the existence of multiple development banks?

  5. LITERATURE • IFIs are a platform for advancing political interests of principal member states(Vreeland, Stiglitz, Easterly, Thacker) • Governance of IFIs: the extent of delegation by member states(Tierney et al, Martin, Gould) • Why states have an interest in membership in IFIs(Rodrik, Milner)

  6. ARGUMENT institution country A B C X How are decisions made? Where is the money going?

  7. ARGUMENT institution country World Bank (US, Wash. Cons.)A IDB (US, but LA influence) B BNDES (domestic interest grps) C X (Brazil) How are decisions made? Where is the money going?

  8. METHODOLOGY institution country WB IDB BNDES BRAZIL power structure/instit design strategy • shareholders • ‘politicking’ • delegation • amount • sector • region

  9. WB IDB BNDES Lending since… 1949 1961 1953 Shareholders 185 48 1 Shareholder power US 16.38% LA 50.016%; US 30.007% -- Brazil’s shares 2.07% 10.752% 100% Gvt guarantee √ √ √ Microlending New, not much, through IFC New, not much, through the IIC yes mission “global poverty reduction and the improvement of living standards” “contribute to the acceleration of the process of economic and social development of the regional developing member countries, individually and collectively” “foster sustainable and competitive development in the Brazilian economy, generating employment, while reducing social and regional inequalities” BASIC FACTS

  10. LOANS TO BRAZIL

  11. 2005-7 SECTOR DISTRIBUTION

  12. INTERVIEWS • Multilateral development banks should not be lending to Brazil • Brazil is a safe borrower • Banks need to show success

  13. FINDINGS • Global, regional and domestic development banks all do the same work • These institutions overlap and compete with one another • Aid/development projects are the same despite different institutional configurations (power structure/institutional design)

  14. CONCLUSIONS • It is not clear that there’s a need for multiple public lenders to middle-income emerging markets • A domestic development bank appears more effective despite its politicization • It seems the IFIs’ potential as a policy tool for principals sustains their continued loan-making to Brazil • Brazil has influence

  15. Preferences, Variance, and Politics of Multiple Lenders: The Case of Brazil Ruth Ben-Artzi Department of Political Science Providence College Prepared for IPES, College Station, TX 11/14/09

  16. Variables and measurements (methodology 2) • major shareholders/Brazil’s shares • negotiations (how decisions are made) • % of loans to sector • % of loans to region • President/political party in power • major trading partners • Regional-level socio-economic indicators (to test for alternative explanation – need based)

  17. WB (Mission and Functions) • IBRD and IDA: “Global poverty reduction and the improvement of living standards.” • ~promote long term growth ~promote investment ~more urgent projects dealt with first ~not to compete with other sources of financing

  18. IBRD • 185 members • Making loans since 1945 (Brazil member since 1946) • Shareholders: Brazil 2.07%; US 16.38% • Developed countries hold majority of votes

  19. IDB (Mission and Functions) • “contribute to the acceleration of the process of economic and social development of the regional developing member countries, individually and collectively” • ~Use funds raised in financial markets, its own capital and other available resources to finance the development of its borrowing member countries; ~ Supplement private investment when private capital is not available on reasonable terms and conditions; and ~ Provide technical assistance for the preparation, financing and implementation of development projects, programs and strategies.

  20. IDB • Started making loans in 1961 • Lends more to Brazil than the WB • Sometimes works with the BNDES • Shareholders: Majority to LA countries (50.016%); US has veto (30.007% - more than any other country) • Brazil’s vote share: 10.752% (together with Argentina is largest regional voter; next is Mexico with 6.912%)

  21. BNDES • Federal development bank • Issues loans at low cost • Financed small projects/micro-lending • Receives $1bn annually from the IDB

  22. Brazil - politics • 1960-4: democracy, weak • 1964: military coup • 1964-1985: military regime • 1985: elections, democracy restored • 1985-1990: Jose Sarney (PMDB) • 1990-2: Fernando Collor de Mello (PRN) • 1992-4: Itamar Franco (PMDB) • 1994-2002: Fernando Henrique Cardoso (PSDB) (re-elected 1998) • 2002--: Lula da Silva (PT) (re-elected 2006)

  23. 1-Agriculture/Rural Development 2-Urban Development 3-Infrastructure – Sanitation, Transportation 4-Environment/Pollution 5-Private Sector Development 6-Public Sector/Governance (Reform/Modernization of the State) 7-Social Investment – Development, Protection 8-Financial Sector/Economic Policy 9-Education 10-Health, Nutrition, and Population 11-Energy and Mining 12-Industry and Trade 13-Science and Technology 14-Multi-sector Credit and Pre-investment 15-Tourism 16-Microenterprises Brazil Loan Data Sector Variables

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