|
37th Asian
Development Bank Annual Meeting
15-17 May 2004,
Jeju Island, Korea
Governor's
Statement
by
Joseph Yam,
Alternate Governor
Hong Kong, China
Mr President, I join other
Governors in: first, thanking the Government and the people of the
Republic of Korea for their warm hospitality in hosting this
year's Annual Meeting; secondly, thanking the Bank's management
and staff for the excellent arrangements made; and thirdly,
welcoming our two new members - Luxembourg and Palau.
Mr President, on the governance
of the Bank, I would like to commend the Bank for adopting a number
of reform initiatives in the past year to enhance accountability and
efficacy of operations. Greater transparency and accountability in
all aspects of the Bank's operation is to be welcomed. Measuring,
monitoring and managing development results are essential. The
creation of the independent Operations Evaluation Department will
enhance the credibility of the Bank's achievements. These
initiatives will put the Bank in a stronger position in meeting the
many tasks ahead.
On the region, Mr President, I
would like to focus just on the continuing challenges arising from
globalisation and the ability, or rather the lack of ability, of
Asia in coping with them. The Asian financial turmoil of 1997-98
demonstrated this vehemently. Since then, Asia has also been
affected by the globalisation of terrorism, geo-political risks and
disease. Indeed, this time last year, the mobility of people in the
region was paralysed by SARS and geo-political risks prevented
Governors from having an annual meeting for the first time in the
Bank's history. And recently there have been predictions that the
large accumulation of foreign reserves and the associated domestic
monetary management problems are presenting considerable risks to
financial stability.
I do not believe that another
Asian financial crisis is in the making. But the fact remains that,
by being relatively small and open, Asian financial markets are
vulnerable to shocks. Just earlier this week, the greater
realisation that the interest rate upturn in the United States may
come sooner and increases possibly larger than expected sent shock
waves through equity markets in the region. This is regardless of
the comfort offered by the much higher savings rate of economies in
the region and the generally low level of indebtedness, of
households and corporations. This is also regardless of the
increasing inter-dependence within the region, as evidenced by the
rapid expansion of intra-regional trade, particularly in final
products, and correspondingly reduced dependence of the region as a
whole on import demand from developed economies.
I have no doubt that Asian
financial markets should remain open and, for those less open,
continue with financial liberalisation, in order to benefit from the
greater efficiency in the international allocation of capital that
comes with globalisation. But there is a need also to reduce
vulnerability by building bigger, deeper, more robust and
diversified capital markets. While the interesting subject of
monetary integration, which would provide a long-term solution, has
been receiving some nascent attention, efforts to enhance the
efficiency of financial intermediation within the region should be
stepped up. Asia as a whole is one of the largest exporters of
capital and, at the same time, also one of the largest recipients of
foreign direct investment and foreign portfolio investment. The
underlying process of capital flows associated with this roundabout
phenomenon involves much greater financial volatility and
instability for the region than the situation where a greater
proportion of savings in the region could more readily find their
way into investments in the region. This underscores the importance
of greater efforts to enhance the efficiency of financial
intermediation within the region.
Indeed, capital market reform is
high on the agenda of most Asian economies. There has also been
considerable progress in the diversification of financial
intermediation channels, specifically in the development of the bond
market. At the end of last year, the amount of domestic bonds
outstanding in eight economies* that we have surveyed was
equivalent to 47 percent of the combined GDP, more than double the
20 percent at the end of 1995. Over that eight-year period, the bond
market's share in total financing grew from 11 percent to 19
percent. But these numbers are still low for the bond market to play
a meaningful role in contributing to financial stability and
enhancing the efficiency of financial intermediation.
A number of regional initiatives
are currently underway to accelerate this development. Under the
APEC forum, Hong Kong, China, joined by Thailand, Korea and the
World Bank are leading the APEC Initiative on the Development of
Securitisation and Credit Guarantee Markets. The ASEAN+3 forum has
initiated an array of studies under the Asian Bond Market Initiative
(ABMI) while the EMEAP Central Banks have already launched Asian
Bond Fund I and are now working on Asian Bond Fund II, which aims at
channelling a small portion of the very sizeable official reserves
held by the Asian economies back into the region.
Mr President, the Bank is
uniquely placed to lend support to the region in these efforts, in
three ways. First, the Bank can enlarge its technical assistance
programme on capital market projects. In this connection, we are
pleased to note the assistance the Bank is already providing to the
bond market initiatives that I have mentioned. Secondly, the Bank
can structure its own debt issuance programme with this objective in
mind, as exemplified by Bank's current efforts to issue local
currency bonds in China and Thailand. Thirdly, the
Bank can encourage borrowers to issue bonds in conjunction with ADB-financed
projects through the provision of partial credit guarantees.
Thank you, Mr President.
*
Hong Kong, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore,
Taiwan and Thailand.
|