Obtaining Finance in Latin America and the Caribbean 1

Similar documents
Avoiding Crime in Latin America and the Caribbean 1

Evolution of EU exports and imports of goods with CELAC, (in billion)

The Economic Impact of a U.S. Slowdown on the Americas

CDM Loan Scheme DNA Help Desk CDM Help Desk

SUBCOMMITTEE ON PLANNING AND PROGRAMMING OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers with Web 2.0 Tools and 21st Century Skills 1

Recognition of Judgments 2016

Health Care Expenditure and Financing in Latin America and the Caribbean [Fact sheet]

Preventing through education

Goal 4. Reduce child mortality

BRAIN DRAIN IN LATIN AMERICA*

Fall 2015 International Student Enrollment

REPORT OF THE KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER NETWORK*

Estimation of PPPs for non-benchmark economies for the 2005 ICP round

Achieve Universal primary education

TRAINING AND CERTIFICATION PROGRAM FOR DRUG AND VIOLENCE PREVENTION, TREATMENT AND REHABILIATION AND REHABILIATION

Installing New Software Using the Online Installer (Backup and Restore Required)

Table 1. Growth of Latin American and Caribbean Medical Schools

Agrimonitor: PSE Agricultural Policy Monitoring System in LAC INE/RND

Thierry Tressel Lead Economist, Research Group, World Bank 2015 High Level Caribbean Forum, Sept , St. Kitts

INTERNATIONAL FACTORING

Latin America s s Foreign Debt

UNITED KINGDOM/ BRITISH PASSPORT SERVICE for Adults Ages 16 & Over

Open access policies: What can we learn from Latin America? Roxana Barrantes Instituto de Estudios Peruanos

Capacity building for non communicable disease prevention and control in Latin America and Caribbean

Senate Committee: Education and Employment. QUESTION ON NOTICE Budget Estimates

Fig 1.1: GDP at Constant 2006 Prices: 2011

THE MULTILATERAL INVESTMENT FUND (MIF) CLEAN & EFFICIENT ENERGY: BUSINESS CASES

A financial plan that s right for you. NAABA General Meeting March 20, 2014

Telephone and Cell Phone Adoptions in Latin American and Caribbean Nations

Dial , when prompted to enter calling number, enter American Samoa Number can be dialed directly Angola 0199

To contact Dell Technical Support electronically, you can access the following websites:

Public procurement as a tool for development in Latin America and the Caribbean Economic and Technical Cooperation

Latin America - Digital Media and Pay TV Market

Survey of LAC agricultural research institutes on technical information management.

RELATION WITH THE IDB GROUP

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

Overview of CAAM-HP and its Achievements

Colombia: sustaining reforms over time

FCPA and Anti-Corruption in Latin America

The Erasmus Mundus Programme: an introduction

Esteban Pérez Caldentey Development Studies Section Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)

Education Goals in the Latin American and Caribbean Region. Compiled by Lorecia Roland LAC Education and Human Resources Technical Services Project

Appendix A. Crisis Indicators and Infrastructure Lending

Education and Training

Dealing with construction permits

Your Global Solution For Medical Flights Caribbean, Americas and Transatlantic

Special Edition ANALYSIS OF HEALTH SECTOR REFORMS. Region of the Americas. No. 12

Countries Ranked by Per Capita Income A. IBRD Only 1 Category iv (over $7,185)

Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture. Performance. Evaluation. Missions

The remainder of this handbook is divided into the following sections: Getting Started (p. 2); Beginner Mode (pp. 3 5); Expert Mode (pp. 5 11).

Working capital and trade solutions. Delivered globally.

EU-LAC DRUG TREATMENT CITY PARTNERSHIPS CITY OF SAN RAMÓN, COSTA RICA

FedEx Ship Manager Software Quick Reference Guide

Accounting Education in Latin America and the Caribbean

Cooperation Agreements for SAR Service and COSPAS-SARSAT STATUS OF SAR AGREEMENTS IN THE NAM/CAR/SAM REGIONS. (Presented by the Secretariat) Summary

OUTLINE OF SUBJECT DIVISION TABLES. Organization of American States (OAS)

Project EU SFA 2005 Objective

Maritime Law Enforcement

UNIDAD DE PROTECCIÓN A LA CAPA DE OZONO - MÉXICO

Cisco Global Cloud Index Supplement: Cloud Readiness Regional Details

States Parties to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol

Coordinating national investment promotion with subnational investment promotion

U.S. Trade Overview, 2013

GUIDELINES FOR THE PERMANENT EXPORT, TEMPORARY EXPORT, AND TEMPORARY IMPORT OF FIREARMS AND AMMUNITION U.S. MUNITIONS LIST CATEGORIES I AND III

Receivables Management Solutions

Application Guideline. for Korea-LAC Scholarship Program (KLSP)

2Q13 Latin America Mobile Operator Forecast,

What Have We Learned from the Enterprise Surveys Regarding Access to Credit by SMEs?

Recommendations for implementing sustainable energy activities in the regions: LAC

research brief A Profile of the Middle Class in Latin American Countries by Leopoldo Tornarolli

Business Phone. Product solutions. Key features

The Importance of Credit Bureaus in Lending Decisions

INDEX. No. I. GENERAL ASPECTS 1 D.

Know the Facts. Aon Hewitt Country Profiles can help: Support a decision to establish or not establish operations in a specific country.

How To Find Out If You Are Safe

COUNTRY PROFILES ON NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES

FIRST ANNUAL REPORT ON THE LATIN AMERICA SMALL BUSINESS LENDING INITIATIVE AUGUST 2008

Chapter3. Human Opportunities in a Global Context: Benchmarking LAC to Other Regions of the World

Country tables. Reform making it easier to do business Reform making it more difficult to do business

Fiscal Rules and Fiscal Responsibility Frameworks for Growth in Emerging and Low-Income Countries

Guidelines for DBA Coverage for Direct and Host Country Contracts

Argentina s Economy: A death foretold again, or a surprise rescue? Claudio M. Loser Centennial- Latin America March 2014

50th DIRECTING COUNCIL 62nd SESSION OF THE REGIONAL COMMITTEE

APEC Information Privacy Principles in the Development of Outsourcing Business: Contact Center in Peru

studies and PERSPECTIves

Information for applicants from Latin America and the Caribbean for study commencing in 2014

1Q13 Latin America Mobile Operator Forecast,

PETITION AND CASE SYSTEM

Produced for the OFFICE OF NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL POLICY

AmericasBarometer Insights: 2009(No.22) * Municipal Corruption Victimization 1

Outsource International Ltd

Japan s Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA)

PMTC Production Management Training Course. Prepared by Gökhan Çelikliay

Sub- Regional Workshop and Consulta;ons on Capacity- Building in Travel Document Security: Colombia, 2013

U.S. Trading Companies, 2012

STATEMENT BY MS. SHORNA-KAY RICHARDS DEPUTY PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE OF JAMAICA TO THE UNITED NATIONS ON BEHALF OF THE CARIBBEAN COMMUNITY (CARICOM)

Non-Sponsored Students From Contributing Countries. Per Annum 252, , ,250 1,265,528 12,723 15,000

INFINITE BANK STATEMENTS (Top Secret with Amendments)

The World Market for Medical, Surgical, or Laboratory Sterilizers: A 2013 Global Trade Perspective

Transcription:

Obtaining Finance in Latin America and the Caribbean 1 World Bank Group latin America and the Caribbean Series Note No. REV. 8/14 Basic Definitions Countries surveyed in and how they are grouped for analysis: In, Enterprise Surveys (ES) interviewed 12,8 enterprises in 3 Latin American and Caribbean countries. In addition in 9, 1,82 firms were interviewed in Brazil also following the standard ES global methodology. For analytical purposes, the 31 countries are categorized into 3 groups: Small Caribbean countries: Antigua and Barbuda, The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Suriname, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines Medium-size countries: Bolivia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Trinidad and Tobago Large countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela. Two waves of Enterprise Surveys, 6 and : Fifteen countries were surveyed in 6 using the ES global methodology: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela. In total,,93 firms were interviewed in 6, of which 3,3 were re-interviewed in. Reference periods of the survey data: The information collected in the surveys refers to characteristics of the firm at the moment of the survey (6, and 9 for Brazil) or to the last completed fiscal year (, 9, and 7, respectively). In addition, sales, employment, and labor productivity annual growth rates are calculated comparing data from the last complete fiscal year of each survey and recall data. Consequently, growth rates refer to the period 2- for the 6 surveys, 4-7 for the 9 Brazil survey, and 7-9 for the surveys. Enterprise Survey data provide detailed information on firms applications for and use of credit, information that can be used to measure their credit constraint status Firms use financial resources and services to make or receive payments and investments, or to manage cash flow. Firms often have insufficient funds to meet their needs and seek external financing from banks or other sources of credit. Good financial services are therefore crucial for firm growth. Enterprise Surveys measure the sources and uses of firm financing, including the sources of credit, the role of internal resources, and the utilization of financial services and instruments such as deposits, loans, and collateral. Since the 199s, the Latin America and the Caribbean region (LAC) has experienced accelerated growth in the banking sector, as well as in the bond and stock markets; financial market participation has also grown, as has financial inclusion. Enterprise Surveys make it possible to assess whether these developments have translated into greater firm access to financial markets and services, or if, as recent sources have speculated, the expansion has been biased in favor of consumption (de la Torre, Ize, and Schmukler 12). Comparing survey responses in 6 and can help determine whether private sector participation in financial markets increased between these years. With respect to the credit side of financial services, the Enterprise Surveys collect rich information regarding firm-level financing decisions in the fiscal year prior to the surveys: the various sources of financing for working capital and investment on fixed assets; applications for loans or lines of credit from banking and credit-only institutions; the motivation for the applications as well as their approval or rejection. This information can be used to measure the extent to which firms were credit constrained. 2 All firms are divided into one of two categories: those that are non-credit constrained, and 1

FIGURE 1 Credit-constrained firms by size and region 6 8% 4 3 41% 22% 33% 41% 17% 22% 19% 34% 28% 3% 46% Sub-Saharan Africa East Asia and Pacific Eastern Europe and Central Asia Latin America and the Caribbean South Asia Large (+ employees) Medium (-99 employees) Small (< employees) those that are partially or fully credit constrained. Firms that are non-credit constrained are those that have received credit from financial institutions, or that are fully satisfied financing themselves with internal funds or using other external sources of finance. 3 Partially or fully constrained firms are those whose applications for loans or lines of credit were rejected by financial institutions, or those that did not apply for these types of financing FIGURE 2 4 3 3 2 1 23% Credit-constrained firms in Latin America and the Caribbean 34% 3% Small Caribbean Large (+ employees) 19% 28% 36% Medium-sized Medium (-99 employees) 11% 24% 28% Large Small (< employees) because of the prevailing market terms and conditions. Partially or fully constrained firms, consequently, had to resort to other sources of external finance or to their own internal funds. The Latin America and Caribbean region fares relatively well globally when it comes to the share of private sector firms that are credit constrained Based on global surveys, nearly 38 percent of firms surveyed worldwide would classify as credit constrained. In the Latin America and the Caribbean region, the performance is better: less than 32 percent of firms fall into the credit constrained category. Indeed, LAC, along with Eastern Europe and Central Asia, are the two regions in which firms are least likely to be credit constrained. While small and medium-size enterprises are slightly more likely to be credit constrained in Latin America and the Caribbean than in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, they are considerably less likely to be constrained than similar firms in Sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia and the Pacific, and South Asia (Figure 1). Within the LAC region, the small Caribbean countries have larger percentages of credit constrained firms than the medium-sized or large countries of the region (Figure 2). This result holds across all firm sizes: small, medium, 2 obtaining finance

FIGURE 3 6 4 3 24% Sub-Saharan Africa Firms that are partially or fully credit-constrained by region 24% 14% East Asia and Pacific Eastern Europe and Central Asia Partially Credit Constrained % 16% 21% Latin America and the Caribbean South Asia Fully Credit Constrained and large-sized firms. The large economies of the region exhibit, on average, the lowest share of credit constraint, across all firm sizes. Still, there is considerable variation even among large economies. In Chile, only 11 percent of firms are credit constrained, while in Argentina the figure is slightly greater than 4 percent. Cross-sectional data from 14 countries surveyed in 6 and again in show no major change in the share of credit constrained firms over this period, 27 percent and 28 percent, respectively. But there is large variation 9% % % across countries. Some countries, such as Panama, Argentina, and Honduras, saw substantial increases in the share of credit constrained firms (increases of 17, 16, and 1 percentage points respectively). Meanwhile, in Bolivia, Paraguay, and Uruguay, the percentage of credit constrained firms fell by more than percentage points over the same period. Latin America and the Caribbean has the lowest share of fully credit constrained firms in the world but the second highest share of partially credit constrained firms Credit constrained firms are either fully or partially credit constrained. Both types were either explicitly rejected on their attempts to get credit from financial institutions or self-selected out of formal financial markets because of the prevailing market terms and conditions. Fully credit constrained firms, however, were also unable to raise any other form of external finance, whereas partially credit constrained firms were able to obtain some external finance from sources other than financial institutions, such as input suppliers, informal moneylenders or friends and relatives. The Latin America and Caribbean region, together with the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region, has the lowest share of fully credit constrained firms of all regions of the world for which Enterprise Survey data is available (Figure 3). The region s share, 9 percent, is much lower than the global average of 17 percent. However, the LAC Obtaining Finance FIGURE 4 credit-constrained firms by size and country 7 6 4 3 Chile Brazil Paraguay Guyana Colombia Dominican Republic Barbados Bolivia Ecuador Peru St. Vincent & Grenadines Uruguay Grenada Mexico Nicaragua Large (+ employees) El Salvador St. Kitts & Nevis Antigua & Barbuda Panama Guatemala St. Lucia Costa Rica SME (< employees) Belize Suriname Bahamas, The Jamaica Honduras Trinidad & Tobago Dominica Argentina in Latin America and the Caribbean 3

region has a high share of partially credit constrained firms; the second highest share across all regions, behind only Sub-Saharan Africa. These results highlight the importance of alternative sources of external finance to the private sector in the LAC region. Considered by firm size, there are large differences across countries in the percentage of firms that are credit constrained. Small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) are more likely to be credit constrained throughout the region, except in three countries: Ecuador, Antigua and Barbuda, and Saint Lucia (Figure 4). On average, an SME is 1.7 times as likely to be credit constrained as a large firm: 32 percent for SMEs versus 19 percent for large firms. Considering only fully credit constrained firms, the four countries in the region with the largest proportion of fully credit constrained SMEs are in Central America: Panama, Honduras, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. A fifth Central American country, Guatemala, is sixth on the list. Comparing estimates from 6 and for the 14 countries for which there is data for both years, it is possible to assess how the global financial crisis affected the financial condition of the formal private sector. The share of credit constrained firms increased only slightly, from 27 percent to 28 percent. Medium and large firms were more likely to experience an increase in credit constraint than small enterprises (Table 1). Table 1 Firm size Credit status in 14 Latin American and Caribbean countries, 6 and Year Partially creditconstrained + Fully creditconstrained = Creditconstrained * Small 6 19% 14% 32% 17% 1% 32% Medium 6 14% 9% 23% 16% 11% 27% Large 6 7% 6% 13% 9% 7% 16% * Due to rounding error, percentages may not add correctly. Credit constrained firms in LAC are associated with lower productivity and low employment growth Credit constrained firms in the region were significantly more likely to experience low labor productivity. Credit constrained firms are also associated with low employment growth. These results were found to be significant after accounting for other potential explanations, such as the age composition of the firms, their size, their type of ownership, and overall growth in each economy. These results, however, do not imply causality: productive firms might enjoy more access to credit because they are more productive, or firms might be more productive due to enhanced access to credit. Nonetheless, the association between performance and credit constraint seems to suggest that financial markets in the region are bringing capital to productive firms. Latin American firms rely more on external funds to finance their working capital than the average firm in the rest of the world When it comes to financing for working capital, the results show that firms in Latin America and the Caribbean tend to rely more heavily on external sources than the average firm in other regions covered by the Enterprise Surveys. Thirty-eight percent of working capital in LAC is financed by external sources, while other regions of the world exhibit percentages below 3 percent. At the same time, there is great variation in the reliance on external sources of finance for working capital across countries, ranging from 8 percent in Panama to 6 percent in Colombia. Among the sources of external funds for working capital, firms in Latin America and the Caribbean rely more on credit from input suppliers and customers than any other region for all firm sizes (Figure ). Bank financing is second in importance as a source of external finance for working capital overtaken only by credit from input suppliers and customers. There is also variation in the reliance on external sources to finance working capital based on the size of the economy (Figure 6). Firms in the large economies of the region rely more on external sources to fund working capital than firms in medium-sized economies and in the small Caribbean countries. Also, firms in large economies utilize credit from input suppliers and customers more intensely than firms in medium-sized or small Caribbean economies. 4 obtaining finance

FIGURE 1 percentage of working capital financed by credit from suppliers or customers 1 1 12 Sub-Saharan Africa 6 East Asia and Pacific 3 7 7 Eastern Europe and Central Asia Latin America and the Caribbean Large (+ employees) Medium (-99 employees) Small (-19 employees) 6 18 19 18 8 7 South Asia Obtaining Finance Investment in fixed assets in LAC are primarily financed with internal funds The Enterprise Surveys also provide data on the sources of financing for investment in fixed assets. Internal funding constitutes the single largest source of investment finance in LAC, although it is considerably less important in large countries. In all 31 countries, investment is primarily financed through internal funds. In larger economies, credit from banking and non-banking financial institutions is relatively more important when it comes to financing investment than in medium-size economies and small Caribbean economies. The average firm in LAC is required to pledge collateral on bank loans at a lower rate than equivalent firms around the developing world The LAC region exhibits the lowest share of firms required to pledge collateral when getting a loan or line of credit: 72 percent compared to a 78 percent global average. However, in almost all countries of the region collateral is required when getting a loan. In only four countries in the region Brazil, Paraguay, Suriname and Peru are fewer than half of the outstanding bank loans recorded as requiring collateral. Land or buildings are the most common form of collateral. That said Brazil shows a surprisingly high use of accounts receivables as collateral. Private firms in LAC are well integrated with the deposit side of financial markets The private sector in the LAC region is highly integrated with the deposit side of financial markets. At 93 percent, the average share of firms using deposit services in the LAC region is higher than in any other developing region of the world. The use of deposit services is high across FIGURE 6 Small Caribbean Mediumsized Large SOURCES of financing for working CApital in the Latin America and Caribbean region * 17 1 17 1 2 2 % % 4% 6% 8% % Banks 16 3 17 23 3 3 64 64 6 Non-Banking Financial Institutions Supplier credit Other Internal * Due to rounding error, percentages may not add correctly. in Latin America and the Caribbean

most countries in the region. In only four countries does the level of firms utilizing a checking or savings account fall below 8 percent: Nicaragua, Panama, Mexico, and Guatemala. Overall, data from the Enterprise Surveys seem to indicate that in the private sector in the LAC region fared relatively well compared to other parts of the developing world when dealing with financial markets. The share of credit constrained firms is lower in LAC and so is the share of firms that are required to pledge collateral when getting loans. On the use of deposit services the region also fares relatively well compared to the rest of the world. These numbers seem to indicate that the region weathered the effects of the global financial crisis that started in 8 relatively well compared to the rest of the developing world. However, there are a few signs of an increase in financial exclusion in selected countries: of the 14 countries with data available for 6 and, five of them show an increase in the share of firms fully credit constrained and in the share of firms not using deposit services. 6 References Ayyagari, M., A. Demirgüç-Kunt and V. Maksimovic. 6. How Important Are Financing Constraints? The Role of Finance in the Business Environment. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 38. World Bank, Washington, D.C. De la Torre, A., A. Ize, and S. Schmukler. 12. Financial Development in Latin America and the Caribbean, The Road Ahead. World Bank, Washington D.C. Kumar, K., R. Rajan and L. Zingales. 1999. What Determines Firm Size? NBER Working Paper 78. National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. Kuntchev, V., R. Ramalho, J. Rodríguez-Meza, and J. Yang. 12. What have we learned from the Enterprise Surveys regarding access to finance by SMEs? Mimeo. World Bank, Washington D.C. Endnotes 1 Lead authors: Rita Ramalho, Jorge Rodríguez Meza and Judy Yang with the collaboration of the LAC report team. 2 For a more detailed discussion of the construction of the metric of credit constraints, see Kuntchev, Ramalho, Rodríguez, and Yang, 12. 3 This group includes recipients of credit from financial institutions who may have been rationed in the size of the loan they received. They are part of the Maybe Credit Constrained category described in Kuntchev, Ramalho, Rodríguez, and Yang, 12. 4 This is found to be significant after accounting for other potential explanations, such as firm size, age, foreign ownership and the overall growth in the economy. This was the case in 6 for the 14 countries surveyed that year, and in for the whole region. Data was not collected for most Eastern European and Central Asian countries. 6 Argentina, Honduras, Guatemala, Panama, and Peru. Enterprise Surveys provide the world s most comprehensive firm-level business environment data in developing economies. An Enterprise Survey is a firm-level survey of a representative sample of an economy s private sector. The surveys cover a broad range of business environment topics including access to finance, competition, corruption, crime, gender, infrastructure, innovation, labor, performance measures, and trade. The World Bank has collected this data from face-toface interviews with top managers and business owners in over 13, companies in more than 13 economies. Firm-level data and summary indicators are available on the website. www.enterprisesurveys.org 6 obtaining finance