Working with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
By Sam Vaknin
palma[at]unet.com.mk
http://samvak.tripod.com
Advertisements:
In
typical bureaucratese, the pensive EBRD analyst ventures with the appearance
of compunction: "A number of projects have fallen short of acceptable
standards (notice the passive, exculpating voice - SV) and have put the
reputation of the bank at risk". If so, very little was risked. The
outlandish lavishness of its City headquarters, the apotheosis of the
inevitable narcissism of its first French Chairman (sliding marble slabs,
motion sensitive lighting and designer furniture) - is, at this stage,
its only tangible achievement. In the territories of its constituencies
and shareholders it is known equally for its logy pomposity, the irrelevance
of its projects, its lack of perspicacity and its Kafkaesque procedures.
And where the IMF sometimes indulges in oblique malice and corrupt opaqueness,
the EBRD wallows merely in avuncular inefficacy. Both are havens of insouciant
third rate economists and bankers beyond rating.
Established in 1991, "it exists to foster the transition towards
open market oriented economies and to promote private and
entrepreneurial initiative in the countries of central and eastern
Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) committed to
and applying the principles of multiparty democracy, pluralism and
market economics. The EBRD seeks to help its 26 countries of
operations to implement structural and sectoral economic reforms,
promoting competition, privatization and entrepreneurship, taking
into account the particular needs of countries at different stages
of transition. Through its investments it promotes private sector
activity, the strengthening of financial institutions and legal
systems, and the development of the infrastructure needed to support
the private sector. The Bank applies sound banking and investment
principles in all of its operations. In fulfilling its role as a
catalyst of change, the Bank encourages co-financing and foreign
direct investment from the private and public sectors, helps to
mobilize domestic capital, and provides technical co-operation in
relevant areas. It works in close co-operation with international
financial institutions and other international and national
organizations. In all of its activities, the Bank promotes
environmentally sound and sustainable development."
Grandiloquence aside, the EBRD was supposed to foster the formation
of the private sector in the revenant wreckage of Central and
Eastern Europe, the Balkan, Russia and the New Independent States.
This it was mandated to do by providing finance where there was none
("bridging the gaps in the post communist financial system"
to
quote "The Economist"). Put more intelligibly, it was NOT supposed
to transform itself into a long-term investment portfolio with
equity holdings in most blue-chips in the region. Yet, this is
precisely what it ended up becoming. It avoided project financing
like the plague and met the burgeoning capital needs of small and
medium size enterprises (SMEs) grudgingly. And it refuses to divest
itself of stakes in the best run and most efficiently managed firms
from Russia to the Czech Republic. In a way, it competes head on
with other investors and commercial banks - often crowding them out
with its subsidized financing.
One of its main mistakes, in a depressingly impressive salmagundi,
is that it channelled precious resources to this budding sector
(SMEs), the dynamo of every economy, through the domestic, decrepit,
venal and politically manhandled banking system. The inevitable
result was a colossal waste of resources. The money was allocated to
sycophantic cronies and sinecured relatives (often one and the same)
and to gigantic, state-owned or state-favoured loss makers. Most of
it lay idle and yielded to its hosts a hefty income in arbitrage and
speculation. As banks went bankrupt, they wiped whole portfolios of
EBRD SME funds, theoretically guaranteed by even more bankrupt
states.
Thus, the only segments of the private sector to benefit handsomely
from the EBRD were lawyers and accountants involved in the umpteen
lawsuits the EBRD is mired in. It is a growth industry
in "countries" such as Russia. This is the melancholy outcome
of
indiscriminate, politically-motivated lending and of a lackadaisical
performance as both lenders and shareholders. In the spirit of its
first chairman, the suave and titivated Attali, the bank is in a
constant road show, mortified by the possibility of its dissolution
by reason of irrelevance. It aims to impress the West with its
grandiose projects, mega investments, fast returns and acquiescence.
In thus behaving, it is engaged in a perditionable perfidy of its
fiduciary obligations. It lends to criminal managers, winking at
their off-shore shenanigans and turning a blind eye to the
scapegrace slaughter of minority shareholders. It throws good money
after bad, cosies up to oligarchs near and far and engages in
creative accounting. Instead of Westernizing the Easterners - it has
been Easternized by them. Its sedentary though peregrinating
employees are more adept at wining and at dining the high and mighty
and at haughtily maundering in the odd, tangential, seminar - than
at managing a banking institution or looking after the interests of
their nominal shareholders with the tutelary solicitude expected of
a bank.
Consider two examples:
Macedonia
The nascent private sector is nowhere to be found in the list of
projects the EBRD so sagely chose to falter into here. The
Electricity and Telecoms monopolies are prime beneficiaries as is
the airport. The EBRD is also a passive shareholder in both big
universal banks - until recently, conduits of state mismanagement.
The SME and Trade Facilitation credit lines were conveniently
divvied up among five domestic banks (one went belly up, the
managers of two are under criminal investigation and one was sold to
a Greek state bank). Despite vigorous protestations to the contrary,
none of this money reached its proclaimed entrepreneurial targets.
Two loans were made to giant local firms - the natural preserve of
commercial lenders and equity investors the world over. The EBRD
contributed nothing to the emergence of a management culture, to the
development of proper corporate governance, to the safeguarding of
property rights and the protection of minority shareholders here.
Instead, it colluded in the perpetuation of monopolies, shoddy and
shady banking practices, the pertinacious robbery
titled "privatization" and the pretence of funding languishing
private sector enterprises.
Russia
Its 2 billion US dollars portfolio all but wiped out in the August
1998 financial crisis, the EBRD has now returned with 700 million
new Euros to be - conservatively but not more safely - lent in major
energy and telecom behemoths.
The historic, pre-1998, portfolio appears impressive. Almost 11
billion US dollars were generated by the EBRD's less than 4. The
bottom line reads 94 projects. Yet, when one neutralizes the
infrastructural ones (including the gas and energy sector) - one is
left with less than 50% of the amount. Add "infrastructure-like"
projects (water transportation and the like) - and less than 30% of
the portfolio went to what can be called proper "private sector".
Moreover, even these investments and credits were geared towards
traditional and smokestack industries: mining, food processing,
pipelines, rubber and such. Not an entrepreneur in sight. And the
EBRD's meagre loan-loss provisions and reserves cast serious doubts
regarding the mental state of both its directors and its auditors.
To varying degrees, these two countries are typical. Development
banks, like industrial policy, import substitution and poverty
reduction, have gone in and out of multilateral fashion several
times in the last few decades. But there is a consensus regarding
some minimum aims of such bureaucracy-laden establishments - and the
EBRD achieves none. It does not encourage entrepreneurship. It does
not improve corporate governance. It does not enhance property
rights. It does not allocate economic resources efficiently. It
competes directly with other - more desirable - financing
alternatives. It is not equipped to monitor its vast and inert
portfolio. By implication it collaborates in graft, tax evasion and
worse. It is a waste of scarce resources badly needed elsewhere. It
should be administered a coup de grace. And its marbled abode - so
out of touch with the realities of its clients and its balance
sheet - should be sold to someone more up to the task. A bank, for
instance.
POST SCRIPTUM - Comments Made to "The Banker" - February 2002
This article was written afew years ago. I would not have written
the same article today. The EBRD used to be pretty monolithic in its
four orientations: pro-state companies, pro-big business (or mega
projects), pro-governmental projects, and pro-commodities (mostly
energy products).
It is now more open to SME financing - and not only as lip service.
Instead of colluding with venal, inefficient, crony-ridden, and
decrepit local banking systems - it has taken over them in
partnership with foreign investors. It has a more tangible in-field
operating presence.
Its assets are more balanced (in maturity structures, single lender
exposures, collateral portfolios, etc.). It is more innovative and
creative in its collaboration with the private sector, offering a
varied range of vehicles. In short: it is becoming more community
orientated and less "commercially" conservative. It begins to
fulfill its original charter of filling the gap between IFI's and
micro-lending. It is still hobbled by overweening political
interventionism - but that is to be expected in a regional
development bank (see the ADB, IADB, and so on).
Sam Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com
) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After
the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global
Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb,
a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the
editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory
and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of
Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com
Published - December 2005
|