Subnational Capital Markets in Developing Countries : From Theory to Practice

In developing countries the twin tasks of building more dispersed and democratic governments and opening economies to freer markets and greater private ownership have been attempted in tandem-and have proved a difficult undertaking. A reduction in barriers to the movement of capital and goods has been a nearly universal objective. However, implementation of the required reforms has meant tough competition for domestic industries and increasing constraints on the fiscal and monetary policies of national governments. In the face of economic slowdowns and unstable financial markets, many emerging and developing economies have found privatization and the opening up of their economies to be painful and unpopular. The steep price and uncertain benefits of joining global markets have their critics. Subnational governments, for their part, are being required to do more things, to do them more efficiently, and to be more self-reliant in raising resources. At the same time devolution and hard-pressed budgets have constrained the ability of central governments to provide for the needs of subnational governments. After years of neglect and with expectations rising, the needs for infrastructure are particularly daunting. The enormous funding requirements cannot be met either practically or equitably without long-term investment. International lending and grant-giving institutions, another traditional source of funds, are also limited in their resources and restricted by rules and customary practice to dealing only through sovereign governments.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Freire, Mila, Petersen, John, Huertas, Marcela, Valadez, Miguel
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank and Oxford University Press 2004
Subjects:ACCOUNTING, ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES, BANK, BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS, BANKING SECTOR, BANKING SYSTEM, BANKRUPTCY, BOND ISSUES, BOND MARKETS, BORROWING, CAPITAL MARKETS, CAPITAL NEEDS, CAPITALIZATION, CENTRAL GOVERNMENTS, CONSOLIDATION, CREDIT ANALYSIS, CREDIT RATINGS, CREDITWORTHINESS, DEBT, DEBT FINANCING, DEBT INSTRUMENTS, DEBT SERVICE, DEPOSITS, DEVALUATION, DEVELOPMENT BANKS, DEVOLUTION, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, EMERGING MARKETS, EMU, EQUALIZATION, EXPENDITURES, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE, FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE INDICATORS, FINANCIAL REPORTING, FINANCIAL SERVICES, FISCAL BALANCE, FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION, FISCAL DEFICITS, FISCAL DISCIPLINE, FISCAL MANAGEMENT, FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY, FREE TRADE, GAAP, GDP, GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES, GOVERNMENT DEBT, GOVERNMENT FINANCE, GOVERNMENT FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, HOUSING, INDONESIA, INSURANCE, INTEREST RATE, INVESTMENT BANKS, LAWS, LEGAL FRAMEWORK, LEVIES, LICENSES, LIQUIDITY, LIQUIDITY RATIO, LOCAL AUTHORITIES, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, LOCAL GOVERNMENT BORROWING, LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUES, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS, MARKET BEHAVIOR, MDF, MUNICIPAL BONDS, MUNICIPAL CREDIT, MUNICIPAL CREDIT MARKETS, MUNICIPAL DEBT, MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT, MUNICIPAL FINANCE, MUNICIPAL INFRASTRUCTURE, MUNICIPALITIES, NAFTA, OPERATING REVENUE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATIZATION, PROJECT FINANCING, PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS, PUBLIC DEBT, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC SECTOR, PUBLIC SECTOR BORROWING, PUBLIC UTILITIES, RATING AGENCIES, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, RESERVE BANK OF INDIA, RESERVE REQUIREMENTS, ROADS, SAVINGS, SECURITIES MARKETS, SECURITIZATION, STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT, STRUCTURAL DEFICITS, SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS, SUBSIDIARY, TAX, TOTAL REVENUE, TRANSFER PAYMENTS, TRANSPARENCY, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE, URBANIZATION CAPITAL MARKETS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, FINANCIAL INFORMATION, BORROWING ACTIVITIES, MONITORING & EVALUATION METHODS, DESIGN CRITERIA, IMPLEMENTATION, POLICY GUIDELINES, CASE STUDIES, DECENTRALIZATION IN GOVERNMENT, GLOBALIZATION OF FINANCIAL MARKETS, OWNERSHIP, INDUSTRIES, INFRASTRUCTURE, BUDGET CONSTRAINTS, REVENUES, TRANSFERS, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, SECURITY MARKETS, LEGAL SYSTEMS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/2881756/subnational-capital-markets-developing-countries-theory-practice
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15044
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