Togo: Selected Issues

Togo’s state-owned financial institutions have encountered similar financial difficulties and restructuring delays.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2019 Issue 206
Publication date: July 2019
ISBN: 9781498323987
$18.00
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Topics covered in this book

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Banks and Banking , Economics- Macroeconomics , Public Finance , ISCR , CR , Togo , outlay , authority , education outlay , frontier , social spending , spending leakage , ECF program , education expenditures in Togo , health performance , WAEMU country , frontier analysis , Privatization , State-owned banks , Corruption , Commercial banks , Sub-Saharan Africa , Global

Summary

This Selected Issues paper investigates state-owned financial institutions’ (SOFIs) performance in developing economies. It focuses on Sub-Saharan Africa, zooming in on the Togolese experience with SOFIs and privatization, at a time when the Togolese government has decided to further disengage from the financial sector. Typically set up with a public interest and financial inclusion mandate, SOFIs tend to weaken financial stability and fiscal discipline in developing economies, especially if they are not typically regulated and supervised on the same basis as other banks. Togo’s and cross-country experiences suggest that performance improves more after privatization when the government fully relinquishes control, when banks are privatized to strategic investors rather than through share issues, and when bidding is open to all, including foreign banks. The success of privatization also hinges on the business environment for competition, governance, and entry, on banks’ valuation and how policy concerns are dealt with, as well as on owner’s prudential review quality.