O U B L I C P O L I C Y F O R T H E SEPTEMBER 1999 S - t - 19691 5 Protecting Minority Shareholders in Closely Held Firms Chad Leechor .D 9 Reviving the Market for Corporate Control Chad Leechor 13 Innovations in Bankruptcv- Prioritizing Creditors Using Options Markets Chad Leecbor 17 Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform Stijn Claessens, Simeon Djankov, and Larry H. P Lang 25 Reforming Insolvency Systems in Latin America -I'alcolm Rowat 29 Reaching the Urban Poor with Private Infrastructure Penelope Brook Cowen and A`icola Tynani 33 Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications Peter L. Smith and Bjorn Wellenius 41 Competition in Mobile Telecoms Carlo Mfaria Rossotto, Michel Kerf andJeffrey Rohlfs 45 Private Participation in Port Facilities-Recent Trends Dirk Sommer 53 Transmission Investment in Competitive Power Systems MTanuiel Angel Abdcala anzd Andres Chambouleyron The World Bank Group * Finance, Private Sector, and Infrastructure Network Private Sector is an open forum intended to encourage dissemination of and debate on ideas, innovations, and best practices for ex- panding the private sector. The views pub- lished are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the World Bank or any of its affiliated organizations. Nor do any of the con- clusions represent official policy of the World Bank or of its Executive Directors or the coun- tries they represent. Private Sector is a quarterly publication dis- tributed free of charge. To subscribe, please send your name, mailing address, telephone number, and fax number to the editor (Suzanne Smith, The World Bank, 1818 H Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20433, email: ssmith7@ worldbank.org, fax: 202 522 2961, telephone: 202 458 1111). Most Notes from Private Sector are also avail- able on-line. There is full text in HTML format for on-screen viewing or a downloadable file in Adobe's PDF format (http://www.worldbank. org/html/fpd/notes/). r t B L I C P OlI I C Y F O R T H E Privatesector For a tree subscript-ion please fill out thi, card Return to Suzanne Smith, Managing Editor, Public Policy for the Private Sector, Room F11K-208, The World Bank, 1818 H Street, NIW, Washington, DC 20433 (fax: 202 522 2961; email: ssmith7@w1orldbank.org) lViCusL . . u > . ,i . utility regulation FIRST NAME, LAST NAME I utility privatization .. energy markets JOB TITLE 2 water markets I transport privatization COMPANY ,u information infrastructure .I . .. ... . . J project finance STREET ADDRESS 2 municipal finance i capital market developrnent CITY STATE b hank restructuring ... . - - . - . . _i sovereign risk management P05TAL CODE COUNTRY JbuMnss law j other EMAIL WORE PHONE WORK FAX Affix Postage Here Privatesector Suzanne Smith, Managing Editor Room FlIK-208 The World Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, DC 20433 USA Dear Readers, This issue deals with two main topics-corporate governance in the context of the East Asian financial crisis and the potential for stiffer competition to improve infrastructure services. The East Asian financial crisis has shown how systemic failure of corporate governance can exacerbate macroeconomic difficulties. Above all, the crisis highlights the dangers of poor financial disclosure, inconsistent accounting standards, perfunctory board oversight, exces- sive corporate leverage, bad banking practices, thin and unregulated capital markets, and lack of expeditious bankruptcy and takeover laws. Several Notes urge policymakers to make more use of market-based mechanisms to improve governance. Writing about private participation in infrastructure, several authors challenge reformers in developing countries to reconsider giving private providers exclusive rights to provide ser- vices in specified areas. Moving away from exclusivity is essential if the reformers are seri- ous about improving service for very poor consumers, especially those living in slums and urban peripheries. Suzanne Smith Managing Editor P r 1Bv Iat e-sI-c t Or.ICYE )i Privatesecto r Quarterly No. 18, September 1999 Protecting Minority Shareholders in Closely Held Firms 5 In all but a few advanced countries most publicly listed corporations are closely held, with the main share- holder typically playing an active role in management. In emerging markets firms with active owner-managers provide effective business solutions where business environments are characterized by corruption and weak contract enforcement. But they also pose a significant risk of asset expropriation for minority shareholders. To promote investor confidence and develop successful securities markets, this risk must be mitigated. Some policy analysts argue that the way to do this is to restrict ownership concentration. This Note argues instead for mitigating risk by strengthening corporate laws to safeguard minority shareholdings, by ensuring that mar- kets for corporate control work, and by enforcing disclosure requirements for firms and ethical standards for public officials. Reviving the Market for Corporate Control 9 Changes in corporate control-through mergers, takeovers, acquisitions, divestitures, and the like-enhance shareholders' value. They allow the businesses to be transferred to the control of new owners who can put business assets to work more efficiently. In most countries, however, the market for corporate control is sig- nificantly restricted by anti-takeover laws andl business practices used to entrench maniagemiienit, such as poi- son pills, heavy debt, pyramid schemes, and cross-holdings of equity. The key to overcoming these obstacles is to restructure incentives-by requiring business groups to disclose intercorporate ownership and banks to limit connected lending, by ensuring that bankruptcy law allows effective transfer of control, and by removing regulatory barriers to takeovers. Innovations in Bankruptcy-Prioritizing Creditors Using Options Markets 13 M\Iany developing countries are trying to establish effective bankruptcy systems, generally modeling them on those of advanced countries. But there is much dissatisfaction with bankruptcy frameworks in advanced coun- tries too. Some alternatives have been proposed. One is an options-based approach that provides an objective way of pricing creditor claims according to priority. With allowances for local conditions, this approach offers developing countries a chance to leapfrog existing bankruptcy practices and their limiitations. Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform 17 This Note reports on corporate control in nine East Asian economies. The analysis shows that the ten largest families in Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand control half the corporate sector (in terms of market capi- talization). Their control is enhanced through pyramid structures and cross-holdings. The concentration of cor- porate wealth and the tight links between corporations and government may have impeded legal and regulatory development. To create incentives for better governance, East Asian governments may have to promote more competition, even by breaking up conglomerates, and curtail related-party lending by restricting ownership of banks. Reforming Insolvency Systems in Latin America 25 Insolvency reforms remain on the drawing board in many countries in Latin America. Existing laxvs tend to be very old, formalistic, unenforced, and heavilv skewed toward preserving the enterprise to protect employment, but at the expense of creditors. Judicial decisionmaking is unpredictable, and corruption is rampant. This Note assesses the weaknesses of insolvency lawv in Latin America and proposes some common solutions. Reaching the Urban Poor with Private Infrastructure 29 Nontraditional infrastructure service providers supply many low-inccme consumers in slums and urban periph- eries in developing countries. And technological change has eased entry by new providers. But the current approach to private participation in infrastructure typically gives exclusivity to a local monopoly for a long period. In return, the monopoly utility is obligated to provide service to all in the area at a certain standard, charging a rising block tariff and using some cross-subsidies. This approach can inadvertently erect harriers to improving service for low-income households. Policymakers therefore need to rethink their approach to private participation transactions and their regulation. In particular, they need to focus on facilitating new entry. Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications 33 In the transition from state-owned monopolies to privately led and increasingly competitive market structures in telecommunications, poor performance of regulatory agencies limits the benefits of reform. This Note pro- poses measures for establishing a regulatory framework that enables better sector performance even when a full-fledged regulatory agency is lacking. These measures reduce the need for agency decisions-for examnple. by prepackaging rules and accelerating competition. They enhaince rhe credibility of regulation-for example, by locking in principles through international agreements. And they generate maxinmum impact from scarce professional and financial resources by using them effectively-such as by contracting out functions and cre- ating multisectoral or regional agencies. Competition in Mobile Telecoms 41 M\Iany governments, particularly in developing and emerging market economies. still doubt the benefits of com- petition in wireless services. But international experience shows that competition in any of the digital tech- nologies brings substantial benefits to users and creates powerful incentives for incumbent fixed-line operators to lower prices, introduce new services, and increase productivity. This Note explores the impact of competi- tion on mobile service using data on Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) technology. Private Participation in Port Facilities-Recent Trends 45 't'he private sector has become increasingly involved in the operation of common-user port facilities during the 1990s, following public sector dominance of the sector since the 19iOs. During the past decade the reform of port administration has gained momentum in industrial and developing countries alike. Between 1990 and 1998, 112 port projects with private participation reached financial closure in twenty-eight developing countries, with investment commitments totaling more than USS9 billion. MIost projects are in East Asia and Latin America. and most are long-term concessions. This Note provides an overview of the emerging trends in developing coun- tries and outlines the main issues for the future. These issues include sustaining competition at a regional level, across networks, and with other transport sectors, such as road and rail. Transmission Investment in Competitive Power Systems 53 Recent power outages in Argentina are largely the result of transmission problems that could be solved by more investment. Investment decisionmaking for capaciry expansion is centralized, but prolonged congestion indi- cates that the process is not working efficiently. Argentina is searching for a decentralized solution. This Note outlines the options for its high-voltage network and proposes a solution for the regional grids. Mvanaging Editor: Suzanne Smith Tne World Bank 1818 H Street, NW __________ Wasnington, D.C. 20433 Telephone: 202 458 7281 Fax: 202 522 2901 Email: ssmith7 m's rid hadbk.org Cover illustration by Ruth Sofair Ketler. Photo on page 4 by FPG __________________________________________ International. Photon on pages 54 and 56by 1994 Photodisc. The entire contents of Private SecnorT 000 World Bank. You are .uthorized to reproduce, duplicate, end disseminate all or part of thin publicoation ________________________________________________ so long es you include the name of the piblication anod the _______ name of the respective e ither. You may not, hnwever, modify, alter, or otnerwise ohange eiy pert of this piolication or nso. transfer, or otherwise d essminate any port of tnt puiblication for______________________________________________ p rof it. 2 Printed no recycled paper. 5 Protecting Minority Sharelholders in Closely Held Firms Chcad Leechor In all but a few advanced countries most publicly listed corporations are closely held, with the main shareholder typically playing an active role in management. In emerging markets firms with active owner-managers provide effective business solutions vhere business environments are characterized by corruption and weak contract enforcement. 13ut they also pose a significant risk of asset expropriation for minority shareholders. To promote investor confidence and develop successful securities markets, this risk must be mitigated. Some policy analysts argue that the way to do this is to restrict ownership concentration. Such a step could cause serious harm. This Note argues instead for mitigating risk by strengthening corporate laws to safeguard minority shareholdings, by ensuring that markets for corporate controll work, and by enforcing disclosure requirements for firms and ethical standards for public officia Is. Modern publicly traded corporations are com- A study of the world's top tw-enty-seven stock monly perceived to have wvidely dispersed owvn- markets finds that only 36 percent of the largest ership and a separation of ownership and publicly traded firms are widely held-that is, control, w7ith the control delegated to profes- with no shareholders controlling more than 20 sional managers. The owners of the firm rely on percent of the votes (La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, the board of directors to supervise the managers, and Shleifer 1999). Most of these widely held voting only on major strategic decisions. The key firms are concentrated in a few- advanced mar- issue of corporate governance in this situation is kets, especially the United Kingdom, Japan, and to ensure that managers act in the best interest the tInitedl States (figure 1). Most large publicly of the shareholders. The board therefore plays a traded firms (64 percent) have a controlling pivotal role. sharcholder. which may be a family (30 percent), the state ('19 percent). or another firm (15 per- In reality, in all but a few adcvanced markets most cent). Amrong smaller companies the share of publicly traded firms are closely held, with the closely held firms is higher still. principal shareholder typically playing a very active role in management. The principal share- In most closely held firms ownership is not sep- holder often serves as the chief executive officer arated from control. For more than two-thirds (69 or chairman of the board and has the decisive vote percent), a nominee or relative of the controlling in major corporate decisions. In this setting the shareholder ranks among the top executives (La key issue of corporate governance is more con]- Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, and Shleifer 1999). In plex: how to prevent the insiders-those who some emerging Asian markets (such as Indo- own a large stake and control the firm-from nesia, the Republic of Korea, and Malaysia) that expropriating the assets of minority shareholders. share is about 80 percent (Claessens, Djankov. 6 Protecting Minority Shareholders in Closely Held Firms FIGURE 1 SHARE OF WIDELY HELD FIRMS IN THE TOP TWENTY LISTED FIRMS, DECEMBER 1995 Percent 100 80 60 40 20 04rV7flSO oONvin Source: La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, and Shleifer 1999. and Lang 1999b). Insiders use a variety of instru- ties as compensation for the risk (Claessens, ments to acquire and entrench their position, Djankov, and Lang 1999a). Where the risk is not including debt, pyramid schemes, cross-holdings adequately checked, the discount can be dra- of shares within a business group, and corporate matic, ranging from 82 percent (Zingales 1994) poison pills (see page 9 in this issue). to nearly 100 percent. In advanced securities markets with stronger protection for outside The risk of insider expropriation investors, the discount tends to be smaller but still significant (6 to 20 percent). Such discounts NWith ownership concentrated among a few large depress the valuation of firms' securities, increas- shareholders who also manage the firm, potential ing the cost of funds and weakening insiders' investors are naturally concerned about the risk incentive to reduce their ownership stake. of insider expropriation. The firm's business could be structured to serve the insiders' interest. The The preponderance of closely held firms in most compensation paid to insiders could be excessive. markets has important implications for the devel- Profits could be diverted to the insidcrs-easily opment of securitics markets. Outside investors done in most markets. A-nd business transactions have few attractive investment options. In addi- may not be at arm's length: sales to related par- tion, with depressed securities valuation, the ties might be underpriced, and purchases from firms find it more attractive to rely on the bank- them overpriced. ing system, where they can contain the cost of funds through collateral. Moreover, limited inter- Some self-serving actions by insiders may be per est in marketable securities hampers the emer- fectly legal. For example, many jurisdictions allow gence of a deep and liquid market. So foreign freeze-outs of minority shares-where the con- investors, often large and prepared to deal with trolling shareholder or an acquirer "takes the com- the risk, may nonetheless be unable to invest. panv private" and pays the minority shareholders a market price that does not reflect the new value Targeting the risk, not ownership arising from acquisition. Some jurisdictions allow the controlling shareholder to issue new shares Despite the risk, the ovnership concentration in through private placement and thereby dilute the closely held firms is not necessarily a bad thing. voting power of outside shareholders. Often it is a response to a variety of business and corporate governance problems. In response to the risk of insider expropriation, outside investors refrain from investing in closely Ow nership concentration eases the job of mon- held firms, or demand a discount on the securi- itoring and directing corporate management. The World Bank Group 7 With just a few large shareholders, changing restructure target firms. The threat of a hostile management or strategic direction becomes takeover-an external source of discipline for more manageable. And in a difficult business management-would weaken. And corporate environment-with a murky legal framework, governance would suffer. uneven ethical standards among public officials, and inadequate transparency among business Experience shows that the risk of insider abuse partners-direct operational involvement of the can be mitigated without limiting ownership major shareholders can safeguard against losses. concentration. Even in the most advanced markets concentrated How to reduce the risk ownership is found in many leading firms. Here ownership concentration can be important in facil- Mitigating the risk of insider abuse can make a itating corporate restructuring and industry con- difference-to the investor, the closely held firm, solidation, which seldom occur at the initiative of and the securities market. The prospect of more existing management, but more often through secure returns enhances investors' confidence. mergers and acquisitions UJensen 1993). In addi- Securities markets become more viable, giving tion, securities analysts generally regard significant insiders an incentive to build the reputation their share ownership by corporate insiders as a sign of firm needs to access the markets. As more equi- commitment-an assessment that enhances the ties are issued to the public, ownership of firms firm's value. Some of the world's most admired becomes more dispersed. companies are closely held, including Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway (Fortunle. March 1, 1999). Several mechainismiis can reduce the risk of insider abuse. The prevalence of closely held firms indicates the effectiveness of ownership concentration as Duty of loyalty a business solution. Thus as long as the risk of insider abuse can be controlled, outside share- A key tool in reducing the risk is a legal pre- holders stand to benefit. So closely held firms sumption of the duty of loyalty owed by insiders pose a policy challenge: the risk of insider abuse to outside investors. Guided by this doctrine, the must be guarded against-while preserving the judiciary vvould expect corporate directors to put many advantages of ownership concentration. the interest of the firm, including its outside investors, before their personal interests. For Many policvmakers and analysts have suggested example, no insiders would be allowed to vote that the risk should be controlled by restricting on transactions in which they have a personal ownership concentration in publicly held firms. stake. The relationship between outside investors But that would be a costly mistake: and corporate insiders is akin to a long-term * The incentive of a large shareholder to provide contract in which the insiders' obligations cannot intensive monitoring and early strategic re- be precisely delineated in advance. The duty of direction would be lost. loyalty addresses this basic difficulty. • Owners of firms in the dynamic growth phase, reluctant to give up a substantial ownership This legal principle works best in an established stake and control, might not sell shares to the legal system in which members of the judiciary public to raise funds for expansion. are honest and competent. Developing such a * Most critical, restrictions on ownership con- legal system can take many years, but is nonethe- centration hamper the market for corporate less well worth the effort. The duty of loyalty. as control. Potential deal-makers might not be a tool for enhancing corporate governance, can allowed, or might find it too costly. to acquire be strengthened by rigorous enforcement of con- the ownership stake necessary to control and tracts and bankruptcy procedures. Since all 8 Protecting Minority Shareholders in Closely Held Firms business obligations represent more senior claims ences. To comply with political directives, corpo- than those of shareholders, corporate insiders face rate insiders may make poor investment decisions strong external pressures to be prudent. or take excessive risks. Enforcing stringent ethical standards and conflict-of-interest laws applicable Market for corporate control to public officials can help. In particular, public officials should be prohibited from deriving per- A functioning market for corporate control also sonal gains or giving preferential treatment to oth- provides a powxverful tool for mitigating the risk of ers through the exercise of official power. But this insider abuse. Dissatisfied shareholders, active safeguard requires a strong legal tradition and institutional investors, and takeover specialists democratic restraints (such as a free press) on the could all acquire an ownership stake sufficient to use of political power. remove existing insiders. But the control market can be curbed by anti-takeover devices, including Market liberalization rights plans (poison pills). intercorporate cross- holdings of shares, restrictions on business In some cases ownership concentration reflects combination, and control share rules (see page 9 broader policy issues, such as protectionism and in this issue). The policy challenge is to review the barriers to entry. These policy distortions could impact of anti-takeover tools and devise remedies. lead to misguided investment, market power, and unusual concentration of wealth. Policy reforms Transparency to correct these weaknesses-antimonopoly laws and liberalization of trade, foreign ownership, Another safeguard is transparency in corporate and market entry-can foster market competition affairs, often achieved through disclosure and broaden the dispersion of wvealth and cor- requirements. Transparency helps investors porate ownership. make informed decisions and deters question- able actions by insiders. Adequate disclosure References requires compliance with accepted financial accounting stmpandards (viAS orceF forafirms Claessens. Stijn, Simeon Djankov, and Larry H. P Lang. 1999a. accounting stanclards (ASC or FASB for firms "ExpropriationofMlino itn Slalcholdets Es idencfhiolnEastAsia listed on the New York Stock Exchange) and Policy Research V'orking Paper 2088. World Bank, Financial Secto auditing standards, as well as the coverage of Plractice Department, Xhashington. D.C material facts, including significant changes in Reerh xhr Controls FaSt Asian Corporat oD lolicx Research Working Paper 203-4 Worlcd Bank. Financial Sector ultimate corporate ownership. But compliance is Practice Department, Washington, D.C. not always enforced. FoGrtne 1999 "Most Admired Companies." NMarch 1. Jensen, Michael C. 1993. The Mlodern Indlistrial RevoloLtion, Exit, and the Failure of Internal Centrol Svstens. "Jou-ttrltoffFirtaotce 48:831-80. Transparency requires the active participation of La Pora, Rafael. Florencio Lopez-de-Sitanes, and Andrei Shleifer. professional watchdogs and reputational agents. 1999. Corporate Ownership around thie \iorld.' Jourtnal o?f Finance 54-471 517 including securities analysts, credit rating agen- Zingales,LLuigi. 1994. "TleValIcofftheVotingRiglt:AStudv ftlie Nlitlan cies, and knowledgeable financial media. Where Stock Exchange Experience" Reviet o'FionancialStutdtec 7:125-4 these services are not available domestically. they can often be imported by liberalizing the Chad Leechor (cleechoar@worldbank.org), financial service industry, allowing local firms to Priivate Sector Development Depairtment. be listed abroad, and permitting local asset man- Business Environment Unit agers to invest in foreign securities. Strong ethical standarcis The integrity and professional judgment of insid- ers are sometimes compromised by political influ- 9 Reviving the Market for Corporate Control Chad Leechor Changes in corporate control-through mergers, takeovers, acquisitions, divestitures, and the like-enhance shareholders' value. They allow the businesses to be transferred to the control of new owners who can put business assets to work more efficiently. In most countries, however, the market for corporate control is significantly restricted by anti-takeover laws and business practices used to entrench management, such as poison pills, heavy debt, pyramid schemes, and cross-holdings of equity. The key to overcoming these obstacles is to restructure incentives-by requiring business groups to disclose intercorporate ownership and banks to limit connected lending, by ensuring that bankruptcy law allows effective transfer of control, and by removing regulatory barriers to takeovers. Many studies of mergers, takeovers, acquisi- tencies through spin-offs of noncore business. tions, and divestitures have confirmed that these Some ac(luisitions are done by venture funds control transactions generally maximize share- and buyout specialists with business ideas but no holders' value (Jensen and Ruback 1983). The operating facilities. Some control transactions gain in value is most visible in target firms' stock bring new management, directors, and compen- prices following announcements of takeover sation, as well as increased ownership by cor- attempts or merger agreements. Even in the porate insiders. These changes tighten the most advanced markets, where control transac- monitoring of the firm's business and link man- tions are common, stock prices increase 20 to 30 agers' incentives to those of the owners. But not percent on average, depending on the type of all control transactions are good for sharehold- transaction (Jarrell, Brickley, and Netter 1988). ers or the economy in general. This may be the This gain represents one part of the increased case when monopolies are involved or when business value that the acquirer is prepared to managers are motivated mainly by a desire to share with the target firm. expand their control over corporate resources. The increase in value primarily reflects improved Despite its important role in corporate perfor- operational efficiency and governance. The mance, the market for corporate control remains combined firm gains economies of scale and highly restricted in most countries. Even in such scope, or "synergy." Fixed costs, such as plant countries as Japan and the United States, regula- and overhead, may be spread over larger output, tory impediments and business shields to pre- and such resources as sales and financing orga- vent takeovers are widespread (see for example nizations can be combined. Some mergers Jensen 1993 and Morck and Nakamura 1999). In reduce capacity, as in the oil industry in the part this reflects public distrust of big business. 1980s. In other cases the change of control is But it also reflects the success of corporate man- designed to focus operations on core compe- agers in lobbying legislators for protection. 10 Reviving the Market for Corporate Control Impediments in coritrol markets Pyramid schemes. Large shareholders or man- agers of a firm may also enhance their control In most countries until recently, efforts to through a pyramid scheme, which allows them reform control markets have focused on anti- to fortify their control of a firm or extend the takeover laws. Now there is a broader perspec- reach of their control. As with leverage, pyramid tive recognizing that firms have developed schemes do not rule out takeovers. But the techniques that help them resist takeovers, even entrenched position of management signals that if they are in the interests of the firm and out- any takeover attempt may be costly. side shareholders. Pyramid schemes generally involve using control Firm-level devices of a publicly held firm to gain control of others. Suppose firm A owns 50 percent of firm B. Under At the firm level, management and controlling a pyramid scheme firm A might use firm B's assets shareholders can use devices to deter or reject a to buy 50 percent of firm C. Firm A would then proposed control bid. have effective control of firm C. Managers of firm A could also fortify their control of firm A by Poison pills. Poison pills are rights, generally directing firms B and C to buy shares of it. given to management, to buy additional shares of the firm at a discount once any person owns Cross-holdings. Intercorporate cross-holdings of more than a specified block of equity (often 20 equity-where firms hold shares in others in a percent). Poison pills dilute the interest of the group-are widespread in such countries as apan bidder and make it necessary to buy more and Korea and in continental Europe. Cross-hold- shares to get control. In effect, they allow man- ings generally occur within a group of firms with agers to reject a bid without shareholders' family or business affinity, including producers of approval. consumer products and suppliers of parts or raw materials. The ownership stakes held hv individ- Debt. Managers-as well as controlling ual firms may he relatively small, but they help to shareholders-can thwart takeover attempts by align the business interests of the group members. borrowing to increase their ownership stake. Management-led leveraged buyouts represent an It is sometimes suggested that with stable owrm- extreme case. Debt allows managers to retain ership, these arrangements promote long-term control over more resources without putting perspectives among firms. But if such groups are additional equity at risk. common, they can sharplv restrict the scope for control transactions. Since members of the group The main restraint on leverage is the risk of generally act together, they can outvote non- losing control through bankruptcy. In many members, including takeover bidders. Evidence countries, however, this threat is weak. Legal suggests that in Japan the key reason for joining frameworks are often dated and do not apply to a business group-keiretsu-is to protect the contract and securities transactions. Even when managers from takeovers (Morck and Nakamura the laws are relevant, the judiciary may be inef- 1999). But as the performance of Japanese firms ficient or corrupt. Since debtors can often pro- in the 1990s shows, stable intercorporate own- long the litigation or pay the judge for a favorable ership does not ensure long-term profitability or ruling, default does not necessarily mean a loss shareholders' value. of control. In these circumstances the use of debt becomes irresistible. In East Asia in 1996, corpo- Regulatory barriers rate debt averaged 200 percent of equity in Indonesia, 240 percent in Thailand, and 350 per- Some regulatory rules inadvertently restrict the cent in the Republic of Korea (Kawai 1999). control market. Others are designed to deter The World Bank Group 11 control transactions, usually to protect jobs and Management becomes more immune to share- stakeholders' interests. But the main result is to holders' lawsuits for opposing value-enhancing entrench the position of management and cor- offers. And the restrictions on the restructuring porate insiders. of the target firm reduce the value of control (Romano 1992). Tax disincentives. In many developing countries tax considerations make control transactions Reviving control transactions financially unattractive. Business reorganizations. including mergers and acquisitions, are treated as While the reform measures differ, revitalizing the taxable events involving realized capital gains or control market is similar to liberalizing markets losses. The target firm's shareholders do not have for goods and services. Success depends on an the option of a tax-free exchange of securities. For informed climate of opinion to create the politi- the sellers, the transaction could produce a tax lia- cal support needed to overcome resistance by bility for which they have no cash to pay. For the vested interests. In addition, growing global bidder, the taxes represent an extra cost and make competition and the search for efficiency can it necessary to offer cash as part of the deal. add impeLus to the reform. Control share rules. In some jurisdictions the own- Dealing with firm-level impediments ership rights of a takeover bidder are restricted. Often the shares purchased within a certain Although such business practices as leveraging, period (usually twelve months) of a control con- pyramid schemes, and cross-holdings impede test have no voting rights. This rule makes it eas- control transactions, they often serve useful pur- ier for management to defeat takeover bids, even poses. Heavy-handed regulation to end them if the bids are in the interest of the firm and minor- may impose economic costs that outweiglh the ity shareholders. In many emerging markets for- benefits. The key to addressing these impedi- eigners face rules, both formal and implicit, that ments is to restructure incentives so that firms limit their participation in the control market. will change their practices voluntarily. Auctions for control. Some jurisdictions encour- Bankruptcy systems. In weak bankruptcy sys- age auctions for the target firm by delaying the tems borrowers seldom lose control to creditors, completion of takeover bids. The delay may be even under default and insolvency. But when the mandated as a waiting period or through pre- consequences of default are swift and certain. merger notification and reporting requirements. borrowers' incentives change significantly. They In the interim the information revealed in the orig- must weigh the threat of takeovers against the inal offer makes a new bid, possibly at a higher risk of bankruptcy, each of which involves a loss offer price, far more likely. Such rules are sup- of control. posed to favor shareholders. In practice, however, they deter takeover attempts by increasing uncer- Although bankruptcy provisions vary from one tainty and the cost of acquisition. country to another, the essential features are effi- cient procedures and predictable outcomes. Also Nonshareholder interests. Many jurisdictions critical are honest and knowledgeable judges and require or allow boards of directors to consider professional insolvency practitioners, lawyers. the interests of stakeholders other than share- and accountants. In some countries it may take holders. Thus directors might reject a takeover many years of institution and capacity building bid if conditions set by workers and the com- before the insolvency regime becomes effective. munity are not met, such as conditions ruling out plant closings and layoffs. But the main benefi- Prudent banking practices. Where prudential ciaries are again management and insiders. regulation fails to maintain adequate lending 12 Reviving the Market for Corporate Control standards, bank finance becomes a convenient reforms needed vary from one country to another. tool for entrenching management and preventing In many developing countries the priority may be takeovers. Many commercial firms own banks to allow tax-free exchanges of securities for legit- and use the deposits to expand business and imate business reorganization. Some of the more increase the insiders' ownership stake. To restrain advanced markets mav need to reverse laws these practices, prudential rules should ban bank designed to deter control transactions. They ownership by commercial firms and require dis- should remove any control share rules that dis- closure of lending to connected parties. criminate against newv or foreign shareholders; allow boards to fulfill their fiduciary responsibil- Transparency. Publicly held firms' policy on con- ity to shareholders in considering takeover bids, trol transactions is important to their investors. It unhindered by conditions set by other stakehold- is essential that these firms reveal not only their ers; and do away with waiting periods for com- basic financial position (including debt and loan pleting control transactions. In some countries guarantees for other firms), but also the extent new legislation or court decisions may be needed to which they own or are owned by other firms to curb the use of poison pills designed to reduce (pyramiding and cross-holdings), their principal the scope for control transactions. shareholders, and their membership in a busi- ness group. In addition, each member of a group References should be required to make a statement about its investment principles and the extent to which its corporate r ak. Cambridges . 1ss. Harevard Un ierity PIress. membership in a group affects the way it exer- Gan ev. G.T., and G. Hanka. 1999. Capital StruLct:, e and Corporate cises rights of ownership in its investee compa- Controa: The Effect of Anti Takeovnr Statutes on FPirm Leverage. nies. Such disclosure serves two key purposes. Jouanal ,f Finance 54(2):519 46. First, it informs investors about the limited scope Role of Hard Claims in Constraining Management.' Atn,erica,t for value-enhancing control transactions, and Fcotortic Review 85:566-85. Jarrell, G.A., J.A. Borikley, and t.M. "venomr 1988. 'The Mlarket for may depress securities prices. Second, it affects Corporate Control: The Estdence since 1980.TJoerrt,alrfconotr:c the reputations of insiders. This can raise the cost Perspectives 2:49-68. of financing, making it costlv for managers to Jensen, M C. 1993. 'Tbe Modern Industrial Revolution. Exit and the Failure of Internal Control Ssstems.jtournalofFtiance-48:831-S8O shield themselves against takeovers. Jensen, Mv.C.. and R.S. Roihack 1983. "The _Maket for Ctporate Control: The Scientific Evidence." JournalofFinatice 11(5):5-50 Requiring disclosure does not ensure its reliabil- Karpoff, JM,. and P.H. Nlaatesta. 1995. 'State Takeovcer Lcgislation and Share Values: The Wealth Effects of Pennsl'lvania's Act 36." ity, however. Equally important are the process Jorrta/ofGorporatefhtatcel13&-52 and the incentives of the parties involved. Kawai. MI. 1999. A CotmpaatitCe Study of Finan:cial anoc Chtporate Management must be held accountable for any Restrcturing in EastAsia. Washington, D.C: 'X'o'ld Bank. m e e t whn r Morck. R., and MI. Nakamura. 1999 "Banks and Corporate Control in misrepresentation, with criminal sanctions for Japan."Journal ofFinance 54(1):319 39. fraud. Accountants and auditors found to be neg- Romano, R. 1992. A Guide to Takeovers: Theors. Esidecne and ligent should face disciplinary action as well as RegoLlation" Yalejouornal on Regulation 9:119-81 the risk of liabilitv. Transparencv improves in the presence of reputational agents such as invest- Chad Leechor (cleechor@worldbank.org), ment bankers, securitics analysts, credit rating Private Sector Development Departmient, agencies, and free financial media. Where these Business Environmnent U-,nit agents are missing, their services initially may need to be imported. Repealing regulatory barriers There is a clear case for abolishing regulations and tax rules that erode shareholders' value. The 13 Innovations in Bankruptcy-Prioritizing Creditors Using Options Markets Chad Leechor Following the wave of recent financial turmoil, many developing countries have learned the value of an effective bankruptcy system in deterring excessive use cf debt and providing an orderly way to resolve a debt crisis. As a result, they are now reforming their bankruptcy systems, generally modeling them on those of advanced countries. But there is dissatisfaction with bankruptcy frameworks in advanced countries too. Some alternatives have been proposed. One is an options- based approach that provides an objective way of pricing credlitor claims according to priority. With allowances for local conditions, this approach offers dev(eloping countries a chance to leapfrog existing bankruptcy practices and their limitations. Effective bankruptcy systems have implications Existing insolvency systems seldom meet these for corporate governance and for securities mar- tests. Because many give control of the firm and kets. For corporate managers and controlling the reorganization agenda to a particular party, shareholders, the cost of bankruptcy includes the often management or senior creditors, there is lit- loss of corporate control and the risk of personal tle scope for the best option to emerge. Existing liability. This threat serves as a restraint on the use owners or managers are likely to propose of debt. In the event of default an efficient and restructuring and keep the firm in business, orderly transfer of corporate control to creditors while creditors who have a limited stake and do reduces the likelihood of asset stripping and loot- not share in the gains when a firm recovers ing by insiders. For creditors, legal recourse would tend to liquidate too many firms. makes it possible to extend credit at a reasonable cost. And in a cyclical downturn or in the face of Existing practices generally provide little incen- financial distress, creditors are less likely to panic tive to find an efficient solution. In some cases and liquidate securities on a massive scale. creditors and shareholders have an opportunity to vote on competing reorganization plans. All An effective framework for bankruptcy should claimants carry the same weight in the voting do the following: process, regardless of their seniority. Junior * It should facilitate the discovery of the best claimants, hoping for a concession from more option for the firm, including preserving the senior creditors, have an incentive to delay the value of assets and finding any value the firm process. To save time and expenses, some senior may have as a going concern. claimants may allow junior claimants a greater * It should preserve the absolute priority of share of the proceeds than warranted by the rule claims. Senior creditors should be fully paid off of absolute priority. Where the necessary major- before junior creditors are paid. itv is not achieved, the process can become pro- * It should be procedurally fair and efficient, tracted. In some cases judges must intervene by leaving little scope for strategic behavior applying the cram-down rule, often for the sake (Iholdouts and tactical delays). of expediency rather than efficiency. 14 Innovations in Bankruptcy-Prioritizing Creditors Using Options Markets Consider a simple example. An insolvent firm is its procedure for pricing claims so that has two classes of creditors. Senior creditors- absolute priority is protected. say banks-are owecL US$1,000, and junior creditors-say trade creditors-are owed Some aspects of this approach resemble existing US$600. Suppose the expected value of the firm bankruptcy procedures. To begin with, the court under the best proposed liquidation plan is would grant a stay of, say, three months on all out- USS 1,000. If the bank creditors set the agenda, standing claims. The court would also appoint an they would call for a quick liquidation, an effi- administrator responsible for drawing up a list of cient outcome. But the trade creditors would opt all claims against the firm and soliciting reorgani- for reorganization, which would give them a zation plans from participants and the general small chance of partial recovery. If the trade public. These steps are much like existing prac- creditors have a vote on the firm's future, the tices, though somewhat more open. The new fea- bank creditors may be unable to implement the tures deal with how to decide on the future of the liquidation or may have to share the proceeds firm and how to preserve the priority of claims. with the trade creditors. The outcome would be inefficient and would violate absolute priority. After all claims are registered, the administrator would determine relative seniority among them Now assume that if the firm is restructured and according to established norms. The administra- kept as a going concern for a year, its expected tor would also issue, say, 100 reorganization value is US$1,300. The efficient solution would rights, which would entitle the holders to vote be to keep the firm in business. The bank credi- on the reorganization plan. Initially the adminis- tors would receive full payment plus interest, and trator would give the claimants call options to the trade creditors paltial payment. The bank buy a share of the rights proportional to their creditors are unlikely to want to keep the firm in claims. These calls would have different strike business, however, since they have no stake in prices, depending on the seniority of the claims. the upside potential. The trade creditors would In addition, each claimant would have an oblig- correctly argue for reorganization. But since the ation to give up his or her reorganization rights banks have more votes, based on their larger if the next class of claimants choose to exercise claims, the liquidation plan may prevail, although their options. Thus the options would have the the banks might have to share the proceeds with characteristics of a call spread (box 1). the trade creditors. Once again, the outcome pro- tects neither efficiency nor absolute priority. The strike prices would play a crucial part in pro- tecting the priority of claims. The most senior cred- A new approach itors would have a strike price of zero, since they would have the first claim on the firm's assets. The In recent years bankruptcy specialists have come next class of creditors would have a strike price set up with new ideas to address the concerns. One so that the proceeds would be sufficient to pay off approach is to use prepackaged bankruptcy pro- more senior debt. In general, the strike price cedures like those of the United States; this would rise as the seniority of claims declines. As approach saves time and money for all partici- residual claimants, the shareholders would receive pants, but does not resolve the underlying con- options with the highest strike price. flicts of interest. Consider an example based on the previous one. Another promising new approach seeks to The banks (owed US$1,000) would have the realign the interests of the claimants so that they right to get the reorganization rights for free, and have an incentive to choose the value-maximiz- an obligation to sell them to the trade creditors ing plan (Bebchuk 1988; Aghion, Hart, and at US$10 a piece. Selling 100 rights at US$10 a Moore 1995). A key innovation of this approach piece would produce US$1,000, enough to pay The World Bank Group 15 BOX 1 CALL IT A SPREAD Options are simple once you know a few basic rules. A call might have strike prices of US$95, US$100, or US$105. A option gives you the right to buy the underlying security, say a Microsoft call with a strike of US$95 is worth more than a call common stock, at a stipulated price-the strike price, or with a strike of US$100 or US$105. strike. When the stock price rises, the value of your call goes You can buy a call option with one strike and sell a call on up, and when it falls, the value goes down. Owning a call is the same security with another strike. This position is a call therefore similar to owning a spread Suppose you buy a stock. If you have sold, or On September30, 1999, this call option Microsoft call at a US$95 strike shorted, a call, you have an oblig- might have a value of US$10 for, say, US$6 and at the same ation to sell the stock. With a time sell a Microsoft call with a short call, you gain when the Symbol: MSQ = GT US$100 strike for, say, US$3. You stock price falls and lose when it Underlying security: Microsoft Corporation then own a call spread at a net goes up. The strike price of the Strike price: US$95 price of US$3. If the stock price call determines what price you Expiration date: 12/17/1999 is above US$100 when the pay or receive for the stock. Options exchange: Chicago Board options expire, the call you own Unlike stocks, options have lets you buy a share of Microsoft an expiration date. If you own an American call, you can exer- at US$95. But you also have to sell a share of Microsoft at cise your right to buy the underlying stock at any time before US$100 because of the call you sold. Your revenue is US$5 and its expiration. If you have sold a call, you may be assigned (or your profit US$2. If the stock price is below US$95 when the compelled) to deliver the stock at any time. A European call, options expire, you lose your investment of US$3. however, allows the holder to exercise his or her right only at Call spreads provide a low-cost and flexible position for its expiration. securities trading and are very popular among professional Call options have different strike prices. Suppose Microsoft options traders. They could also be a powerful tool for pricing stock is trading at US$100 a share. Active calls on Microsoft creditors' claims in an insolvency proceeding. off the bank creditors in full. The trade creditors the firm's future. The reorganization plan would have the right to buy the 100 reorganiza- selected by those holding reorganization rights tion rights at US$10 a piece, and an obligation to might leadl to a liquidation or a restructuring of sell them at US$16 a piece to the next class of the firm. The holders of the rights might become claimants, the shareholders. The proceeds from the new owners of the firm or might sell the that sale (USS1,600) would pay off all the debt. rights to the party that submitted the winning proposal. As the reorganization plan is imple- Trading in the options on reorganization rights mented, the creditors would be paid through the would be permitted before the stay period sale of their reorganization rights and the firm expires. The original claimants could sell options would emerge from bankruptcy. to any interested buyers, including those who have submitted a proposed reorganization plan. Where to use the new approach? The value of these options would depend on the perceived value of the firm as well as the strike The main advantage of this proposed approach price of each option. For example, if the firm is is the opportunity it creates to discover and perceived to be worth US$500. the trade credi- implement the best possible plan for the insol- tors' option, with a strike price of US$10 to get 1 vent firm. The new owners choose the plan, not percent of the firm, would have little or no value. parties wiith narrow or conflicting goals. Equally But if the expected value of the firm is US$2,000, important. the approach preserves absolute pri- even shareholders' options, with a strike price of ority. No claimants receive a payment until those USS16, would have considerable value. with more seniority are paid in full. At the end of the trading period the 100 reorga- In addition, the approach provides no incentive for nization rights would go to those who exercise holdouts, a particularly difficult problem under their options, and the party or coalition holding existing insolvency practices. Junior claimants, a majority of the rights (fifty-one) would control such as shareholders or unsecured creditors, have 16 Innovations in Bankruptcy-Prioritizing Creditors Using Options Markets no say in the firm's future unless they are willing need to allocate and trade options. Where the to pay off more senior creditors. At the same time value of secured debt is large relative to total the firm is not held hostage to senior creditors with claims, the approach also might not apply. a limited stake. These senior creditors must give Secured creditors have a contractual right to up their control if a party with a better idea pays seize the collateral and may be uninterested in them off by exercising [he call options. Arbitrary the options. But if the value of the collateral is decisions, like a cram-clown or forced continua- less than the debt, the secured creditors may tion of a nonviable business, become unnecessary. want options to cover the shortfall. But the approach is not universally applicable. Look before you leap Its design presupposes a well-functioning capi- tal market and a well-established legal system, The options-based approach to bankruptcy has features lacking in most developing countries. strong intellectual appeal. But while wx ell know-n Changes in the design are generally needed to to specialists, these new ideas have not yet been suit local conditions. implemented. The U.K. Treasury has received a proposal for bankruptcy reform based on this Without a well-functioning capital market, the approach and has commissioned a detailed prospective buyer of the insolvent firm may lack review. The Mexican government has received a access to the liquiditv needed to achieve control. similar proposal but has not yet made a decision The financing method, a part of the proposed on it. By adopting this approach, adapred to local reorganization plan, typically includes cash circumstances, a developing country that lacks a needed to pay off creditors. If some of the final viable bankruptcy framework may be able to holders of reorganization rights are willing to leapfrog existing bankruptcy practices ancl their hold the securities issued under the winning reor- wvell-documented shortcomings. ganization plan, the need for external financing may be mitigated. References Aghion, P., 0. Hart .tnd J. Moore. 1995. Insolvencx Rerorm in thf Another possible constraint is lack of familiarity t'K A Revsed Proposa 'nsolteocyLoo Poacric tt :6. - with options. Options markets tend to develop Bebchuk, L.A. 1988 A New Approach to Corporate Reorganization. well after securities markets do. But a full- Harvardl Lau, Recieu 101:77 -804 G-22 Working Parmv. 1998. "Recomtnendlat ons on NLtnagtng Financial fledged options market is not essential. What is Crises International M8netary Fond. WXashington D.C. needed is an adequate understanding of the Hart, O.. R.L.R Drago, F Lopez-de-Silanes, and] . Moore. 1997. A ANe' basic rules among the participants. An important BankOIptcy l'rocedure ibmt L.ses .lltiple Autcions. N BIT variant of this approach proposes using auctions uNVorktng Paper 6278. Canabridge, Mlass.: National Bureau of variant othsapocprpssuigauctions Economir Researrh. in place of options in pricing and allocating Hotchkiss, F.S. 1995. "Post Bankruptcy Perfotreance and reorganization rights (Hart and others 1997). .Management Ttrnover.'Joirnal ofFinance 50:3 21. Auctions have the appeal of beingw nVeiss, L.A. 1990. "Bankruptcy Resolution: )irect Costs and Violation Auctions have the appeal of being widuelx under- ofAbsolute Priority '"Joournal ofbinancial'conomics 27:285-314. stood. But they can replace only the trading in Wteiss, L.A., and K.H. \Vruck. 1998. -Information Pioblents, Confliclt options. The basic pricing rules and the obliga- of Interest and Asset Stripping: Chapter 11's FailuLre in the Case of tion to give up the reorganization rights at the Eastern Airlines."Jouirnalo/'loiJanciElrconot7ics 48:55 97. stipulated prices remain necessary. Chad Ieechor (cleechor@uorldbank.org). Even where these constraints do not exist, the Private SectorDevelopment Department options-based approach may have little rele- Business Environmient Unit vance in many cases. Where there is a consen- sus that the firm's value is significantly less than its outstanding debt, the procedure should move immediately to liquidation. There is no 17 Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform Stijnz Claessens, Simeon Djankov, and Larrl' H. P Lang This Note reports an analysis of ultimate control While the analysis shows that ownership con- in nearly 3,000 publicly traded companies in Dec- centration in these countries is in keeping with embcr 1996-bcfore the financial crisis-in nine lcvcls in other developing and some industrial East Asian economies: Hong Kong, Indonesia, countries, its findings shed light on the viability Japan, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, the Philip- and vulnerability of corporate governance struc- pines, Singapore. Taiwan (China), and Thailand. tures in East Asia. The concentration of corpo- The analysis shows that the ten largest families in rate wealth and the tight links between Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand control corporations and government may have half the corporate sector (in terms of market cap- impeded legal and regulatory development, italization), while the ten largest in Hong Kong directly or indirectly. To create incentives for bet- and Korea control about a third (figure 1). More ter governance, East Asian governments may extreme, in Indonesia and the Philippines ulti- have to promote more competition, even by mate control of about 17 percent of maIket capi- breaking up congloiiierates, and curtail related- talization can be traced to a single family. party lending by restricting ownership of banks. FIGURE 1 MARKET CAPITALIZATION CONTROLLED BY TOP TEN FAMILIES, 1996 Percentage of total market capitalization Japan Taiwan (China) Malaysia Singapore Korea, Rep. of Hong Kong Thailand Philippines Indonesia 0 20 40 60 80 100 Somrce:Claessens, Djankov, and Lang 1999. 18 Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform mid structures and cross-holdings, andl voting FIGURE 2 A PYRAMID OWNERSHIP rights consequently exceed formal cash flow STRUCTURE rights (table 2). Pyramid schemes generally involve using control of a publicly held firm to gain control of others (as in figure 2). Management is rarely separated from ownerslhip Li family control, and in two-thirds of firms that are not widely held, the managers are related to the controlling shareholder. D _ = _ I Patterns of controlling ownership stakes differ * I - across countries, with ownership concentration generally diminishing with the level of economic and institutional development. 'I'his negative association suggests that companies gravitate ___________________________ Ctoward less concentrated control as their coun- *l = tries become wealthier. Some of the differences in ownership patterns Note: Numbers refer to percentage ownership shares. Source: La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, and Shleifer 1999. anse from differences in companv and securities laws across countries. Various rules determine the ownership stake needed to exercise effective control, such as the minimum percentage of Ultimate control shareholdings required to block major decisions or to call an extraordinary shareholders meeting. Control is defined as 20 percent of voting rights In Korea restrictions on the voting rights of insti- (as in the methodology, developed in La Porta. tutional investors in listed companies and high Lopez-de-Silanes, and Shleifer 1999). Corpo- minimum percentages required to file class rations are divided into two categories: those action suits (30 percent of the vote) imply that widely held and those with ultimate owners. A relatively small ownership stakes can result in widely held corporation is one in which no own- effective control. ers have significant control rights. Ultimate own- ers are of four categories: families (including A possible factor in the degree to which corpora- individuals with large stakes), the state, widely tions are widely held is the evolution of capital held corporations, and wiidely held financial insti- markets. In Thailand a formal stock market was tutions such as banks and insurance companies. established only in 1975-and in tndonesia, in 197,'while the stock market inJapan has existed The results of the analysis show family control in since 1878, and the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong more than half the corporations in East Asia since 1891. Eurthermore, in Japan following World (table 1). But significant cross-country differ- War II, the Occupational Forces pursued a delib- ences exist. In Japan corporations are generally crate policy of dispersing ownership (Aoki 1990). widelv heldl, while in Indonesia and Thailand they are mostly family controlled. And state con- Family control trol is significant in Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand. Perhaps a more meaningful focus of analysis, particularly if the concerns are market entry, The analysis shows that in many East Asian access to financing, and government policy, is economies control is enhanced through pyra- the pattern of control by family groups. To The World Bank Group 19 TABLE 1 CONTROL OF PUBLICLY TRADED COMPANIES IN EAST ASIA, 1996 Percent, except where otherwise specified Corporations with ultimate owner Widely held Widely ""Iii financial held Economy Family State institution corporation Hong Kong 330 7.0 71.5 4.8 5.9 10.8 Indonesia 178 6.6 67.3 115.2 2.5 8.4 Japan 1,240 85.5 4.1 7.3 1.5 1.6 Korea, Rep. of 345 51.1 24.6 19.9 0.2 4.3 Malaysia 238 16.2 42.6 34.8 1.1 5.3 Philippines 120 28.5 46.4 :3.2 8.4 13.7 Singapore 221 7.6 44.8 40.1 2.7 4.8 Taiwan IChina) 141 28.0 45.5 :3.3 5.4 17.8 Thailand 167 8.2 51.9 24.1 6.3 9.5 Note: Weighted by market capitalization. Source: Claessens, Djankov, and Lang 1999. TABLE 2 MEANS OF ENHANCING CONTROL IN EAST ASIANI CORPORATIONS, 1996 Percentage of sample Economy _ Management Hong Kong 18.84 25.1 9.3 69.1 53.4 Indonesia 19.17 66.9 1.3 53.4 84.6 Japan 19.89 36.4 11.6 87.2 37.2 Korea, Rep. of 19.64 42.6 9.4 76.7 80.7 Malaysia 18.11 39.3 14.9 40.4 85.0 Philippines 18.71 40.2 7.1 35.8 42.3 Singapore 19.91 55.0 15.7 37.6 69.9 Taiwan (China) 19.61 49.0 8.6 43.3 79.8 Thailand 19,22 12.7 0.8 40.1 67.5 All - 57.1 Note: Cap = 20%Vrefers to the average percentage of book value of common equity required to control 20 percent of the vote. Controllingowneralonemeansthatthere is nosecond owner holding at least 10 percent. Managementmeansthatthe chief execu- tive officer, board chairman, or vice chairman is a member of the controlling family. Source: Claessens, Diankov, and Long 1999. 20 Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform TABLE 3 HOW CONCENTRATED IS FAMILY CONTROL? Hong Kong 2.36 6.5 32.1 Indonesia 4.09 16.6 57.7 Japan 1.04 0.5 2.4 Korea, Rep. of 2.07 11.4 26.8 Malaysia 1.97 7.4 24.8 Philippines 2.68 17.1 52.5 Singapore 1.26 6.4 26.6 Taiwan (China) 1.17 4.0 18.4 Thailand 1.68 9.4 46.2 Note: Data refer to 1996. Source: Claessens, Djankov, and Lang 1999. capture this, the analysis looked first at the aver- economies is the Chungju-Yung family-which age number of firms in the sample controlled bv owns Hvundai and its related companies-with a single family. That number is largest in holdings worth -SS48 billion. Indonesia-more than four-and smallest in Japan-about one (table 3). Another measure of wealth concentration is the share of market capitalization held by the top These numbers already suggest that in most family or by the top ten. In Indonesia 16.6 per- East Asian economies ultimate control of the cent of market capitalization can be traced to the corporate sector rests with a small number of ultimate control of the Salims-and in the families. Further evidence is the number of Philippines. 17.1 percent to the Ayalas (figure 4). firms and the market value of assets controlled The top ten families in Indonesia and the by the largest family group in each country. The Philippines control more than half the corporate largest family group in a country does not nec- sector (57.7 percent and 52.5 percent). Control is essarilv coincide wvith the largest business also concentrated in Thailand (46.2 percent) and group. In Japan the largest keiretsu-the Hong Kong (32.1 percent). In Korea, Malaysia, Mitsubishi Group-controls more than 400 and Singapore the top ten families control a affiliated firms, but does not have a single con- quarter of the corporate sector. In Japan family trolling family. In Indonesia the largest con- control is insignificant-the top ten own only 2.4 glomerate is the Salim Group, which is percent of market capitalization. controlled mainly by Soedono Salim but also in part by the Suharto family. The Suharto family Concentration, rule of law, and has many other holdings-members collec- corruption tively control assets worth USS24 billion in the sample firms-and is considered the largest There are many direct and indirect channels stockholder in Indonesia (figure 3). The largest through which business may influence govern- family holder in terms of assets across all nine ment, and government may play a role in busi- The World Bank Group 21 FIGURE 3 THE SUHARTO GROUP Source: W.i. Carr 1997. ness. For example, senior government officials scores of small textile and pharmaceutical busi- may give preferential treatment to family mem- nesses to highly protected financial oligopolies bers. A case in point is the business empire of with exclusive rights over a wide array of invest- the Suharto family in Indonesia. Business groups ment transactions. Many companies operate in led by Suharto's children, relatives, and business defense-related industries and are thus exempt partners, many of whom also serve in the gov- from financial and ownership disclosure require- ernment, control 417 listed and unlisted compa- ments, making it difficult to estimate the true size nies. The most direct link, of course, is through of the party's corporate portfolio (Baum 1994). the large state-controlled companies prevalent in The main political parties in Malaysia-Umno Malaysia and Singapore. and the Malaysian Indian Congress-also have substantial business holdings. Govcrnmcnt and business rnay also be linkcd through indirect control of companies by ruling Have the concentration of wealth and the impor- political parties. In Taiwan (China) the main tant links between government and business political party, Kuomintang, has a controlling helped shape the lcgal s,ystemi in somc East Asian stake in 155 companies, some of them overseas. economies? In the wake of the East Asian finan- Kuoniintang's corporate holdings range from cial crisis, many analysts have argued that if a few 22 Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform FIGURE 4 THE AYALA GROUP b 3k ~ Mermac Inc.Ayala corp - _ Ayala Foundation AYC Overseas | Po =7re Foods f Ayala Land IMicro Electronics BPI GlobeTelecom I I Note: The numbers refer to percentage ownership shares. BPI is the Bank of the Philippine Islands. Source: Koike 1993. The World Bank Group 23 TABLE 4 DOES CONCENTRATED FAMILY CONTROL SHAPE LEGAL SYSTEMS? Judicial Rule of Corruption Economy efficiency indexb law index index Hong Kong 34.4 10.00 8.22 8.52 Indonesia 61.7 2.50 3.98 2.15 Japan 2.8 10.00 8.98 8.52 Korea, Rep. of 38.4 6.00 5.35 5.30 Malaysia 28.3 9.00 6.78 7.38 Philippines 55.1 4.75 2.73 2.92 Singapore 29.9 10.00 8.57 8.22 Taiwan (China) 20.1 6.75 8.52 6.85 Thailand 53.5 3.25 6.25 5.18 Note: Data refer to 1996. a. Share of total market capitalization controlled by the top fifteen families. b. Assesses the efficiency and integrity of the legal environment as it affects business, particularly foreign firms. Source: Claessens, Diankov, and Lang 1999. families play a large role in the corporate sector ture of the corporate sector and the level of and the government is heavily involved in and institutional development. Moreover, La Porta influenced by business, the legal system is less and others (1998) show a relationship between likely to evolve in a way that protects minority the ownership structures of individual corpora- shareholders and promotes transparent, market- tions and judicial and legal development. based activities. But little evidence has been col- lected to support this argument. Conclusion To test the argument, the analysis compared the In most East Asian economies wealtlh is concentration of corporate control by families concentrated in the hands of a few families and with three indexes of judicial and legal devel- links between government and business are opment: efficiency of the judicial system, rule extensive. These features may have directly or of law, and degree of corruption (La Porta and indirectly impeded legal and regulatory devel- Lopez-de-Silanes 1998). The indexes run from opmnent. Thus relationships between patterns 1 to 10. witlh 10 indicating the most efficient of ownership and the characteristics of legal judicial system, strongest rule of law, and least systems are not necessary casual, as has been corruption. The correlations between the mar- suggested for somye countries. These findings ket capitalization share of the fifteen largest imply that in some East Asian economies suc- families and the three indexes are very strong cessful legal and regulatory reform may require (table 4). This result suggests that the concen- changes in ownership structures and concen- tration of corporate control plays a major part tration of wealth. Findings also suggest that in the evolution of the legal system-that there insider control may have contributed to the are relationships hetween the ownership stric- weak per-formance and risky investments of 24 Who Controls East Asian Corporations-and the Implications for Legal Reform many East Asian corporations before the finan- cial crisis. References Aoki, 'Masahiko. 1990. Toward an Econonaic lodel of the Japanese Firm. Joumnal (f Econontic Lt/erature 28:1-27 Baun,Julian 1994. The Mlonev Machine: Tainan's Kuonornang. 'Far Eastern Economic Revtiec, August 11. pp. 6246. Claessens. Stijn. Simteon Diankox-, and Larrv H.P Lang 1999. XWho Controls East Asian Corporationsr' Policy Reseasch XVorking Paper 2054. World Bank. Financial Sector Practice Departtment. Washington, D C. Koike, Kenji. 1993. The Asala Group during the Aquino Period: Diversification along oith a Changing Ownership and xIanagrement StrucltLre." Develrpitg EconottPea 31:442-63. La Porta, Rafael, and Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes. 1998. Capital Markets and Legal Instituttiots.' Paper presented at the FPoLunth AnnLtal Conference on Development in Latin Amierica ancl the Car hhean, June 28-30. La Porna. Rafael. Florencio Lopez-dc-Silanes. and Andrei Sileifer. 1999. Corporate Ow nership around the World.' Journal o()f Finance 54.471-518. La Porta, Rafael, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes. Anclrei Shleifer, and Robert W Vishny 1998. Law andc Pinance ' ,Jotrnal ofPFofical [conoomt 106:1113-55. W0.1 Carr. Banque Indosuez Group. 1997. Indonetosian Group Connecrions. Jakarna. Stijn Claessens (cclaessens@worldbank.orgj, Lead Economnist, Financial Sector Strategy and Policy, Simeon Djankov (sd/ankov@ worldbank.org), FinancialEconomist, Financial Sector Strategy and Policy. and Lariy H. P Lang (llang@baf ismail. cuhk.edu.hk),. Professor, Chinese University of Hong Kong 25 Reforming Insolvency Systems in Latin America MUalcolm Rowat Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, and Peru have recently revised their insolvency laws. The Argentine reforms are of special note because they have been complemented by labor law reforms. But reforms remain on the drawing board in many other countries in Latin America-including the big economies of Brazil and Mexico-where the laws tend to be very old, formalistic, unenforced, out of touch with today's business practices, and heavily skewed toward preserving the enterprise to protect employment, but at the expense of creditors. Moreover, judicial decisionmaking is unpredictable, and corruption is rampant. In some countries anticreditor political pressures appear to have stalled the reform process. This Note assesses the weaknesses of insolvency law in Latin America and proposes some common solutions. Conflicting interests operation and preserving employment. To mini- mize the risk of being trapped in bankruLptcy cases, Most insolvency systems share two prime objec- French bhnks provide mostly short-term credit, tives: allocating risk among participants in the renewing the loans only if the risk of bankruptcy economy in a way that is predictable, equitable, over the next period is low. Yet this short-term and transparent, and maximizing the value of the financing increases the risk of bankruptcies caused insolvent firm for the benefit of all interested par- by transitory decreases in firms' cash flows. ties and the broader economy. Disputes usually center on hiow to maximize value-whether In the absence of an effective avenue for collec- through liquidation or reorganization, whether tion and a viable insolvency system. creditor with the existing management or under new banks have turned to the state for bailouts- management, and at whose expense. Once this sometimes billions of dollars worth. After the is settled, the dispute then becomes a matter of 1994 financial crisis in Mexico, for example, the hierarchy-who gets paid, how much, and when. state responded to banks' request for a bailout by creating special vehicles to purchase troubled Where to strike the balance between the rights of loans. Mexican bankers resorted to the govern- debtors and creditors is a political decision. In ment in part out of a feeling that the insolvency Latin America the balance has historically favored system is ineffective in controlling credit losses. preserving the enterprise to protect employment. While the consequences of a policy favoring Weak creditor protection may also deter banks preservation of the enterprise have not been stud- from lending. One legal practitioner observes ied closely in Latin America, one possible effect is that Brazilian concordata (reorganization) and a tendency to provide overly short-term credit. bankruptcy laws enable solvent debtors, without This is shown by an analysis of the French insol- showing compelling need, to obtain a morato- vency system. which emphasizes keeping firms in rium on their debt, allowing them to repay it in 26 Reforming Insolvency Systems in Latin America depreciated currency, or to have part of their in their jurisdiction is less virulent than it once debt extinguished. In both cases unsecured cred- was. itors run the risk of substantial losses, and even secured creditors can suffer losses. With sophis- Fourth, a 'rescue culture"-wZhere creditors' inter- ticated lenders clearly understanding these risks, ests are protected-is unlikely to thrive in the conventional, unsecured lending may not take region without better enforcement. Skepticism-if place. not cvnicism-about the functioning of the current systems is pervasive. Regardless of the text of the Current problems law, faith in the system is unlikely wlhere creditors find, for example, as they have in Mexico, that the There are five main categories of problems. First, executive branch at the state level has refused to many of the current insolvency laws are rigid, for- give the police the power to execute judgments malistic, and old. In Mexico few suspension de out of political concems over the public's reaction pagos proceedings (suspension of payments pro- to enforcement. Such skepticism is widespread ceedings, the closest thing in Mexico to a reor- among general counsels of Mexican banks, which ganization) succeed. And in Brazil as well as face a large backup of collection cases. Their view Mexico many of the insolvency provisions are is that creditors have little chance of collecting on simply theoretical or are not followed in practice. their debt in the current political environment and Both countries have insolvency schemes that date that judges do whatever they can to prevent col- from the 1940s, with provisions still on the books lection. One bank alone is reputed to have 35,000 that were designed to accommodate the difficulty collection cases pending. This situation has led of communicating before telecommtnications. some to observe that in Mexico the issue is less the While age alone is no reason to reform a law, lack of a rescue culture than the existence of a cul- most of the region's economies have changed ture of nonpaymcnt. radically in recent years. while the laws have not. That the absence of a rescue culture creates Second, the high degree of judicial discretion needless losses is borne out by current practice. increases uncertainty and financial risks and en- In Mexico secured creditors regularly accept set- courages corruption (though in Argentina recent tlements worth far less than the value of their col- reforms have diminished this discretion). Judges lateral, recognizing that a court process is likely have the power to make such critical decisions as to bring only delay and even lower value. Across selecting the trustee and deciding contested issues Latin America creditors tend to lose all expecta- of fact and law. In some cases they can decide tion of a meaningful recovery once a debtor what is in the best interests of all concerned. Some enters the insolvency process, deterring them observers have accusecl the courts of having a from getting involved with the system. Instead, paternalistic and interventionist perspectivc that creditors tend to write off a debt once a borrower values the general interest over the collective is in bankruptcy. In Brazil a "white concordata" judgment and interest of the stakeholders. process has developed in which crecditors agree to accept payouts below the statutory minimums Third, corruption is rampant. References to the once a debtor threatens to file for fJien(:ia "mafia" that works the bankruptcy field are com- (liquidation). mon. The sense is not that organized crime is somehow endemic in the system, but that a core Fifth, as noted, there is a pow-erful, explicit bias group of players control the field and exact kick- in favor of labor. In Brazil, Mexico, and backs and bribes in exchange for favorable treat- Venezuela labor claimants receive a high degree ment. While opinions about the severity of the of preference and protection. For example, labor problem vary, they vary within a narrow range, claimants in Mexico are not affected by insol- with some observers believing that the problem vency moratoriums, are free to pursue their The World Bank Group 27 claims outside the bankruptcy court, and effec- past dealings, particularly with regard to trans- tively have priority over secured creditors. fers, collateral arrangements, and the like. Trustees should also be given greater power to New priorities recover assets wrongfully transferred, particu- larly overseas, through better procedural pro- A common set of essential reforms can be pre- visions, both domestic and international. scribed for all cotntries in l.atin America, although the priority and sequencing of reforms Help preserve going-concern value before and in a country will depend on its circumstances. during insolvency. To aid the preservation of going-concern value, insolvency laws in most Crack down on corruption. The widespread cor- Latin American countries need to be revised to ruption in the insolvency system-not only provide for more timely and predictable relief, by: among some judges but also among the core u Defining more precisely the standard to be met players (trustees, debtors, creditors)-calls for a before insolvency relief can be granted (such multipronged strategy: as failure to pay a fixed number of creditors * Requiring disclosure of behind-the-scene deal- within a. certain period). ings (such as collusive bidding or wrongful * Permitting and encouraging insolvency relief transfers of value from debtors to creditors). so that it is more broadly available (as in the * Creating incentives for ferreting out corruption. Costa Rican reform), not just for extreme finan- * Setting rules of conduct-emphasizing trans- cial disaster. parency, accountability, and conflict of * Fixing a definite period, prior to a bankruptcy interest-for trustees in insolvency cases. filing, within which a judge or trustee can void * Fostering associations of insolvency profes- transactions that may be fraudulent or harmful sionals to help improve knowledge, standards, to other creditors (probably three to twelve and practice through education, peer pressure, months'). and political influence (as in Canada). Revising avoidance statutes to encourage res- olutions before petitions are filed. (Under the Delink criminal and bankruptcy issues. Many new Argentine law a mortgage or lien is not Latin American countries have laws that classify avoidable if the unsecured debt had matured, bankruptcies by different degrees of fault (with encoura.ging commercial banks to grant con- no differentiation between the business and the cessions during a workout.) businessman), some of which can result in crim- Providing protection for postpetition creditors inal sanctions and bar insolvency relief (as in to encotmrage the granting of credit during Mexico). By mixing the business and criminal insolvency proceedings. aspects of insolvency, these laws deter owners Eliminating provisions that needlessly drive and managers of failing businesses from seeking toward liquidation (such as those prohibiting outside help early. Criminal conduct should not the sale of assets before they are appraised, or preclude insolvency relief to a business in crisis. making creditors that, as a group, have voted for a debtor to stay in business liable to third Foster transparency. To ensure that all partici- parties if the debtor cannot perform). pants in the insolvency process have accurate Providing for exits other than liquidation if a and timely information, priority should be given debtor fails to obtain the required consents from to maximizing transparency. creditors to a proposal. (In Argentina share- * Current statutes should be revised to require holders interests can be sold to third parties.) meaningful disclosure of information, particu- larly financial information. Protect collateral. To give workouts a real chance * Trustees and other stakeholders should be of success, secured creditors could be barred given greater power to investigate debtors' from pursuing mortgage claims for a reasonable 28 Reforming Insolvency Systems in Latin America period during a nonliquidation proceeding. But domestic case: reasonable notice, access and the debtor should compensate the creditors participation, predictability, enforcement, and appropriately for the value of the collateral that it fair and transparent distribution of assets. consumes. Conventions ensuring cross-border cooperation Reduce delay in bankruptcy proceedings. While have been difficult to achieve. But recent initia- promptness is a virtue in nearly all judicial pro- tives on several fronts may be promising. In the ceedings (as long as quality is maintained), bank- private sector CommitteeJ of the International Bar ruptcy proceedings in particular demand rapid Association has prepared a concordat providing resolution because of the costs of delay to a firm's procedures and administrative arrangements for going-concern value and its underlying assets. cross-border court cooperation, which has been Judges should be educated about these costs, and successfully implemented in a case involving U.S. needless legal impediments that slow insolvency and Canadian courts. Probably more important for proceedings shoulcd be eliminated. These include Latin American countries is the mocdel law on the procedures for proof of claims, the ability to cross-border insolvencies developed in 1997 by routinely appeal decisions, and the need for per- the United Nations Commission on International sonal validation of claims in court hearings. Trade Law (UNCITRAL) to foster procedural and administrative coordination among courts. This Enhanceflexibility in reorganization. Current insol- law should be adopted by Latin American coun- vency statutes have excessively formalistic and tries as a useful starting point for effective collab- rigid requirements for reorganizations. Flexibility oration across borders. should be built into the relevant laws to: * Allow for more than just a predetermined pay- Provide specialized courts and training. The com- out schedule (as in Brazil and Mexico). plexities of insolvency exacerbate the problems XAllow for capital restructuring, including debt- of inadequate judicial training in Latin America. to-equity conversions. Special training on bankriptcy and insolvency * Make adequate provisions for executory con- law is essential for judges, along with training on tracts (for example, contracts that are only par- business concepts such as accounting, deriva- tially completed). tives, netting, and interest and exchangc rates. * Address the setoff of debts in financial contracts. * Provide for insolvencies of groups of affiliates The specialized nature of bankruptcy law also (not permitted in Brazil and Mexico). requires specialized bankruLptcy courts. Such courts * Provide for the special needs of small and have been successfully piloted in several countries medium-size businesses, for example, by sim- in the region. Where specialized courts are not plifying insolvency pcocedures for them (as is feasible in the near term because of a lack of now done in Argentinia). resources or qualified judges, insolvency cases could be routed to designated commercial law Promote cooperation in cross-border insolven- judges. Another possibility is to use nonjudicial cies. Latin America has long adhered to the "ter- mechanisms to resolve cases, as in Colombia, or ritoriality" principle in cross-border insolvency formal alternative dispute resolution programs, cases, with each state asserting sovereignty. With xvhich could be annexed to courts or free-standing. the globalization of investment bringing about more joint ventures and other transactions that IThis Note is Wased on 'Malcolm Rowvat and Jose Astiganraga. Lalin cross national boundaries, there is a growing AO2e-icanliso/ltencrStc,77scnm-AcmporoAvel Wscsnw orld Bank need to harmonize bankruptcy and reorganiza- Technical Paper 433. WXashington. D.C . 1999) tion proceedings across borders. Those involved in cross-border bankruptcy proceedings want Malcolm Rowat (mrowat@worldbank.org), the same results that they would seek in a Priv ate Sector Dev elopment Department 29 Reaching the Urban Poor with Private Infrastructure Penzelope Brook C(owen and Nzicola Ty7:lnan The current approach to private participation in strict definitions of affordabilitv-for example, infrastructure can inadvertently erect barriers to that a household should spend no more than 5 improving service for low-income households in percent of its income on water. Increasing expe- developing countries. The approach frequently rience with social tariffs is bearing out theory- involves exclusive control of a local monopoly based concerns that the prime beneficiaries of over a long period and an obligation to provide these tariffs may not he the poorest households, service to all or to all who request it within the and that the tariffs may create disincentives to area of exclusivity. It also generally includes reg- expand services to low-income areas. ulations setting uniform service and quality stan- dards (often with high technical standards for An alternative approach inputs and outputs), and tariffs based on rising blocks and with an element of cross-subsidy. Competition between large, international compa- nies to serve existiing network customers has Underlying the approach are assumptions that received much attention from theorists and poli- the infrastructure sectors involve a high degree cymakers. Policy advisers initially focused on the of natural monopoly (so that conferring exclu- potential for new entry at the 'generation" end of sivity would have little impact on potential infrastructure businesses and for competition competition); that governments not only can across networks-for example, competition be- define appropriate service standards but can en- tween power plants selling into or across a force them: and that below-cost tariffs for low- national transmission grid, or competition in long- consuming households-social tariffs-are an distance calling across conventional telephone effective and practical way to ease poverty. lines. Such entry can be expected to benefit all households connected to the grid, by increasing But there are serious doubts about these assump- service options and reducing costs. In some tions. Experience in gas, power, and telecommu- industrial countries competition has spread to the nications suggests much potential for competition retail level, with households able to choose their in the provision of these services. Technological provider of gas. electricity, or cellular services. innovations in service delivery-from cellular Again, these innovations primarily benefit con- phones to condominial water and sewerage sumers connected to conventional service deliv- systems-are broadening the range of service ery networks (cellular phones are an exception). delivery options, away from monolithic network But they may also speed new connections bv standards. Analvsis of how low-income house- reducing the costs of connections and services. holds (especially those in slums and peripheries of cities) purchase infrastructure services, and of But large-scale competition between formal util- their willingness to pay for different kinds of ser- ities is not the only means for improving vice delivery and quality, raises questions about consumers' service options. More recently, there traditional service standards-for example, man- has been growing interest in the potential of dates that all households should have in-house another kind of entry to benefit low-income water connections. Such analysis also challenges households: entrv by nonconventional suppliers 30 Reaching the Urban Poor with Private Infrastructure of infrastructure services, which may not always low-income households to secure services of a involve connection to a formal network. quality acceptable to them and at a price they are Examples include small-scale electricity genera- willing and able to pay. tion (diesel generators, household solar panels), water delivery by tankers or through low-cost The possibility for entry, the forms this entry might piping, and access to telecommunications take, and the remaining public policy concerns dif- through prepaid wireless phones or privately fer across sectors and countries. But common pol- owned local phone booths. The nature of ser- icy questions arise. These include the possibility vice innovations varies. Sometimes a network is for small-scale providers to establish and abutse constructed, but more cheaply than by conven- monopoly power (such as in small-scale local net- tional utilities (for example, condominial water works) and the implications of more varied forms or sewerage systems might use cheaper pipes of of service provision for public health and safety. shorter lengths that are buried less deeply than For example, are tanker prices for water high conventional networks and installed and main- because costs are genuinely high, or because ille- tained with community labor). Sometimes solu- gality strengthens the tanker mafia? Are costs of tions are found that require no network of pipes informal (illegal) provision raised because the high or wires (local electricity generation, cellular risk of expropriation causes providers to invest in phones) or less extensive networks (as in sew- relatively expensive non-network technologies erage, where the efficient scale of treatment has and increases their cost of capital? If costs are high fallen). And sometimes technological innova- in part because of illegality and risk of expropria- tions allow payment arrangements that ease pur- tion, legalizing tankers and allowing competition chases by low-income households (smart cards will improve services for the poor that allow prepayment for water or power, load limiters that keep electricity consumption to Such policy issues raise questions about the effi- affordable levels). cacy of conventional policy solutions. For exam- ple, are regulatory systems designed for one or Technological change has also eased entry by a small number of traditional utilities likely to be new providers. Easier entry raises the possibil- effective for dealing with abuse of local monop- ity that private cooperatives, small-scale entre- oly power in illegal slum settlements? Is it possi- preneurs, or existing utilities from other sectors ble to develop effective means of tracking and countries will start delivering infrastructure people's exposure to health and safety risks services. Many low-income consumers in the (unsafe drinking water, exposed wires, poorly slums and peripheries of developing country maintained vehicles) in disaggregated and cities already receive service from suppliers other diverse delivery systems? However daunting than the monopoly utility. Informal provision is these questions, it is important to recognize that typically seen as necessarily inferior to service they are not created by the decision to take non- delivery through formal networks. At best, it is conventional service delivery seriously. They seen as a stopgap-a way to deliver services until already exist for all the communities that do not the formal network reaches a neighborhood, receive services from formal utilities-but with with privately developed systems often subse- formal provision the ultimate policy goal, they quently transferred to the monopoly utility. At are almost always swept under the rug. worst, it is seen as actively harmful (as in the deliverv of dirty or stolen water-sometimes both Low-income households already select their pre- dirty and stolen-by tanker mafias, or black mar- ferred service on the basis of available price and ket installation of unsafe electrical wiring). quality combinations. They often choose low- Government officials and policy advisers often quality services because they have few alterna- underestimate the potential of informal provision tives and face high marginal costs in switching to to offer a good medium- to long-term means for something better. Allowing entrants to expand the The World Bank Group 31 range of price and qualitq options in low-income electrical wiring is permitted) are often set at areas could improve the quality of service industrial country levels, leading to high start-up received without necessarily requiring consumers costs and creating a disincentive to expand net- to spend more or to adjust their preferences. work services. Easing or setting aside such stan- Demand-side policies, such as microcredit or dards may raise the quality of services delivered community involvement, may complement and in poor areas even if these services fall short of reinforce these supply-side improvements. industrial country ideals. Designing private infrastructure Best practice policy advice and many contracts for projects to facilitate entry private participation have moved away from the more restrictive input standards based on inter- Making private participation in infrastructure national companies' existing technology toward pro-poor requires rethinking the design of both output standards that allow greater flexibility in transactions and supporting regulation. For how services are provided. But wThile output stan- example, by paying greater attention to market dards can encourage innovation in inputs, they structure and the potential for entry before con- discourage more significant innovation by con- tracting with the private sector, policymakers can tinuing to use existing forms of service-usually help open new service options for low-income connection to a large network-as the standard. households. They will need to refocus regulation Policvmakers should think about ways to redesign on facilitating entry and monitoring quality and regulation to encourage improvements in the prices to end users. And they may need to refo- quality of service received. The focus should be cus regulatory and transaction processes. on such ou tcomes as the basic potability of water at point of use or electric lighting for homes every Avoid service cuts. At the least, arrangements for day-and therefore on ultimate goals of public private participation should not cut off existing health and safety, and poverty alleviation through service options or reduce choices for the poor. But improved access to infrastructure. sometimes this can happen by accident. Contract drafters, taking earlier contracts as models, often Rethink interconnection. Restructuring infrastruc- transplant clauses that are irrelevant or poorly ture markets to facilitate entry and innovation may suited to the city or country in which they are raise new issues in the areas of interconnection working. Some water concessions include exclu- and bulk supply, in both pricing and logistics. sivity arrangements that give the private operator Regulation focusing on interconnection issues has rights to close down wells in areas not yet con- become routine in such sectors as telecommuni- nected to the formal network. Far-reaching exclu- cations, but seldom addresses serving the poor. sivity provisions remain common in local systems Allowing entry by microentrepreneurs to supply for solid waste collection and gas and electricity low-income neighborhoods raises additional distribution. Simply reassessing the relevance of issues for regulators. For example, water retailing these clauses can help make contracts for private by entrepreneurs who purchase water from an participation more pro-poor. incumbent utility's trunk network raises questions about the availability, quality, and price of bulk Focus on outcomes. Market restructuring to water. How will the regulator monitor the quality allow entry-for example, in retailing-can of water dListributed by multiple retailers? What remove a major legal barrier to service expan- role should the regulator play in encouraging sion, but may not be enough to encourage entry rather than just enforcing agreements? Where a when entrants face rigid input or output stan- power supplier uses small-scale generation to dards. Technical standards for svstem construc- serve a low-income settlement, but seeks backup tion (the depth of pipes beneath roads, housing from an existing utility, a range of interconnection construction standards that must be met before issues may arise. What is the maximum load a 32 Reaching the Urban Poor with Private Infrastructure small-scale supplier can obtain from the utility? credit will help low-income households afford Does the availability of backup supply depend on the longer-term options. the time of day or yearf In some sectors solutions to these problems could involve explicit contrac- In designing regulation for a market structure tual provisions for interconnection berween sup- that allows free entry, policymakers need to pliers or for bulk supply. In others regulators may consider a more complex set of customer-to- need to facilitate discussions between incumbent provider rclationships than with a single pro- utilities, community groups, and alternative vider. Policymakers also need to recognize providers. supplier and consumer variety. Regulators need to pay more attention to designing mechanisms Untie support. Easing entry by avoiding exclu- that ensure access to the regulatory process for sivity and supporting low-income households residents in low-income settlements (for through, for example, land tenure initiatives and example, through local hearings or local com- better access to microcredit should reduce the plaint bureaus). And they may need to institute gap betw-een service affordability and con- advisory groups to solicit the views and sumers willingness to pay. But these improve- concerns of local service suppliers and commu- ments mav still leave a gap. Subsidy targeting nity organizations engaged in low-income thcn becomcs critical. Governments should communities. avoid tying subsidies to one provider because this will deter entry by raising the relative price Manage transition. Ideally, pro-poor approaches of alternative serv-ices. Subsidies should be tar- to private participation in infrastructure would geted to low-income consumers and designed to address all the key issues affecting entry and the allow consumer choice of sen-ice. expansion of sen-ice options to low-income areas. In the long run this could mean never Redesign processes. Mlaking private participa- awarding blanket concessions to one supplier, tion in infrastructure more pro-poor is also likely thoroughly reassessing technological standards, to require a refocusing of transaction and regu- and avoiding social tariffs. But governments may latory processes. For example, early in the not be able to implement every desirable reform reform policymakers might pay more attention at one time. Policy sequencing then becomes to identifying how losw -income consumers critical. Some policies (allowing entry and com- obtain infrastructure services, the scope and petition, shutting down existing sources of sup- nature of nontraditional supply, the willingness ply, stipulating high technical standards) are of loss--income consumers to pay for improved difficult to change once a private sector contract access to and quality of services, and institutional is in place. Others (for example, reform of tariff barriers to improved service (for example, in structures to eliminate the sen-ice disincentives land tenure or access to microcredit). Strength- implicit in social tariffs) are more easily changed ening property rights in illegal settlements can post-transaction. Incremental moves to make increase the return from investments in durable policies more pro-poor must ensure that the assets. The reduction in risk will give low- hard-to-change policies are not left until late in income households a greater incentive to switch the process. Policymakers also need to ensure from day-to-day purchases to longer-term that each step not only does no harm to the poor, sources of supply. Uncler monopoly provision, but also supports timely, sustainable improve- the slow transmission of information may leave ments in service. poor consumers unaware of many lower-cost options. Informing the urban poor about supply Penelope Brook Cowen (pbrook@ options will increase the viability of long term worlclbank.org), Private Participation in investment in new technologies once the risk of Infrastnrcture Group, and Nicola Tynan expropriation disappears. Improved access to (ntynanCgmnu.edcu), George. Mason University 33 Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications Peter L. Smith and Bjorn Wellenius In the transition from state-owned monopolies to privately led and increasingly competitive market structures in telecommunications, poor performance of regulatory agencies limits the benefits of reform, especially in countries with a tradition of weak governance. Bearing in mind that the main objective is not a successful agency but a well-performing sector, this Note proposes measures for establishing a regulatory framework that enables better sector performance even when an effective, full-fledged regulatory agency is lacking. These measures reduce the need for agency decisions, enhance the credibility of regulation, and generate maximum impact from scarce professional and financial resources by using them effectively. Although each of the measures has a primary purpose, several contribute to more than one (table 1). TABLE 1 REGULATORY STRATEGY CHECKLIST: PRIMARY (0) AND SECONDARY (-) BENEFITS Measure @ Accelerate competition 0 0 Prepackage regulatory rules 0 0 * Establish rules for interconnection 0 0 0 Keep operators'obligations reasonable 0 0 Focus licensing on the main operators 0 0 Rebalance prices early 0 0 Reduce regulation as competition develops - E Adopt transparent processes 0 Harness public support * Lock in principles through international commitments Outsource regulatory functions 0 Adopt alternative dispute resolution * * * Put the operators to work 0 0 Consider multisectoral agencies 0 Create regional capacity 0 34 Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications ifl a In the transition from state monopoly to private and competitive market structures, regulation is needed to promote the public interest for several reasons. Regulatory strategy Containing abuse of marketpower The former state monopoly is Most new regulatory arrangements hinge on a likely to remain the largest operator for some time. Customers regulatory agency loosely modeled on North should be protected from abuse of this market power, typically American public utilitv commissions that have .. . . .. . ...............developed procedures and credibility over reflected in high prices, insufficient supply, poor service quality decades. To work well, this model of regulation and reliability, slow repairs, slow introduction of new services, requies cert conditis a onguaatin requires certain conditions: a strontg administra- inaccurate and incontestable bills, and corrupt practices in tive tradition, the abilitv to undertake commit- allocating scarce service. New service providers must also be ments that endure from one government to the protected. next, and a judiciary that is impartial, immune to government and political pressures, and able to Fostering competition. This means action on four fronts: make enforceable decisions (LevTy and Spiller U Unless all regulatory barriers to entry and competition are dis- 1996). It also requires substantial professional cadres, capable of handling complex regtilatorv mantled at the outset, someone must decide from time to time how many operators can enter the market, who can enter the concepts and processes. Telecommunications regulatory agencies generally need thirty or more market, and under what conditions. professional engineering, accounting, pricing, • New entrants need access to scarce resources initially con- legal, and administrative staff (more if, as is often trolled by the incumbent-most critical, the radio spectrum, the case in emerging economies, the regulatorv telephone number blocks, and rights of way. agency also manages the radio spectrnmm) and .. Developing effecti competitio hingsometimes plan on more than 100 (Nulty and * Developing effective competition hinges on new entrants' abil- Schneidewinde 1989). ity to access the incumbent's customers and to use parts of the incumbent's network at prices that reflect costs. Thus intercon- When these institutional and country features are nection between new and established operators is at the heart not in place, regulatory effectiveness, and there- of the competition agenda. fore sector development, can be seriously under- * Constantvigilanceisneededagainstanticompetitivebehavior, mined (box 1). In the Philippines, for example, particularlybythe incumbent (cross-ownership among operat- friendly ties with the government in 1978-83 allowed the Philippines Long Distance Telephone ing companies, limitations on resale, conditioning of sales) but Companv (PLDT), the countrv's dominant tele- also by fast-growing new entrants. phone company, to raise prices, borrow heavily, limit investment in local facilities, take over othler Creating a favorable investment climate. Investors need to be con- companies, and channel high profits to the vinced that the rules of the game under which they are investing accounts of controlling shareholders. By 1992, in can be relied on. In particular, they need to he confident that their the wake of changes in the government, an eco- nomic slowdown, and efforts bv PLDT to thwart investments will be safe from de facto expropriation through arbi- newv entries in the market, outstanding applica- trary changes in prices, taxes, and service obligations. tions for service exceeded telephones. Regulatory failures played a big part, including large price dis- Narrowing development gaps. A fully commercial approach to tortions. the absence of effective rate-of-return telecommunications will go a long way toward meeting develop- regulation that might have created incentives for ment objectives, including extending access to rural and low- extending local service, and continued protection income urban areas. But gaps in meeting universal service goals of PLDT's de facto monopoly. These failures are likely to remain, calling for public sector initiatives or financ- resulted in the worst possible outcome: exclusive ing to complement or catalyze those of the private sector, rights for a service provided not at all in some areas and inadequately in most others. Yet the sec- tor was privately owned and equipped with a reg- The World Bank Group 35 BOX 2 UGANDA'S PREPACKAGED RULES Network rollout. The bid evaluation criteria for the second national operator license included both license bid price and net- ulatory agency modeled on public utility com- work rollout. The winning bidder proposed to build 89,000 lines missions in the United States. over five years (more than the 50,000 required), a goal now included in its obligations. Regulatory intervention will be limited The general steps in setting up effective regula- to monitoring compliance and establishing approaches to provid- tion include establishing an agency with a firm ing service in unserved areas. foundation in law, limiting opportunity for gov- ernment intervention, starting up the agency Price control. The licenses specify a price cap-type price regula- well before privatization, ensuring financial and tion, which will continue for the five years the duopoly in basic administrative autonomy, hiring competent staff, establishing a proccss for appcal, giving the services is in effect. No further regulatory decisions on prices will agency the means to enforce its decisions, and be needed during this period. setting clear botndaries and links with other institutions (see for example Wellenius forth- Interconnection. Both licensees are required to negotiate inter- coming). But in countries with weak governance connection agreements. Pending agreement, either licensee can and limited administrative and professional request from the other the immediate application of the prices and skills, the regulatory strategy should also focus terms of a default interconnection agreement appended to the on: licenses. * Reducing the need for agency decisions. * Enhancing regulatory credibility. Monopolistic practices. The licensees cannot unduly condition the * Using resources effectively by outsourcing somne provision of telephone service on purchase of terminal equipment, regulatory tasks and pooling sector knowledge. and cross-ownership between the companies is prohibited. Reduce the need for agency decisions Resale. The licensees are obligated to provide basic exchange Reform plans typically expect the regulatory service for resale for public pay telephone service. agency to do too many things too soon. A more practical approach is to reduce the need for reg- ulatory action, especially in the early years after significantly expanding local telephone facilities privatization. This can be done in seven main in regions throughout the country. By 1996 the ways. number of lines in service had almost tripled, to 1.8 millioni. Accelerate competition The regu]ator's job is eased when it can Opening the market quickly to new entry and adjudicate among several influential players or competition not only accelerates the full benefits constituencies. Multiple players provide the from reform but also makes the job of the regu- regulator with alternative sources of informa- lator more manageable. The question is no tion on sector issues, reduce the risk of regu- longer whether to have competition-the tradi- latory captLure by any one operator, and offset tional arguments for exclusivity, even temporary some of the dominant operator's economic exclusivity, no longer hold (Smith 1995; Noll and political power. 1998). Instead, it is how fast competition should be ushered in. Allowing competition in the core Opening the market to new entry is easiest early telephony business creates powerful incentives in reform-before or at the same time as for the incumbent to perform better. PLDT accel- privatization-when large unmet demand allows erated investment to catch up with demand only both the incumbent and new entrants to grow. after the Philippine government issued licenses Large initial productivity gains by the incumbent in 1993 for mobile service and for several new following privatization will allow it to reposition international gateways to consortia committed to itself for coMpetition, but opening the market 36 Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications early enough can prevent it from using these impact on new entry is so important, that it is gains to entrench its clominant position. useful to have interconnection rules or guide- lines that provide a framework for negotiation Prepackage regulatory rules and eventual regulatory adjudication-as Mexico found when it prepared for competition If rights and obligations of an operator or class in long-distance and international services in of operators need to be specified, it is best to 1996. Moreover, the parties often have unequal write these into licenses, contracts (such as for resources, negotiating power. and ability to cope the sale of state enterprises), or laws. Then tech- with delays. nical assistance (from multilateral or bilateral agencies, for example) can be concentrated up The authorities can address these issues by estab- front to establish a detailed base-case regulatory lishing up-front default terms of interconnection environment. (both price and technical) by which all parties must abide while they negotiate or if they fail to Uganda provides a good example of this strategy agree. Alternatively, the dominant company (box 2). There, a moderately pro-competitive pol- could be required to publish a standard inter- icy and specification of initial regulatory rules in connection offering. Guatemala's 1996 telecom- the licenses of the main operating companies munications law sets caps on interconnection (along with other elenments, discussed later) add charges for two years following privatization and up to a fairly robust regulatory framework. A key specifies how the regulator should resolve inter- part of the strategy was to immediately introduce connection pricing disputes between operators. some competition in all services by authorizing a And in Uganda the license for the second national second national operator to provide local, cellu- operator includes a detailed default interconnec- lar. domestic long-distance, and international tion agreement. telephone services alongside Uganda Telecom- munications Ltd. (UTL), the state monopoly being Keep operators' obligations reasonable privatized. Before bids were invited for the sec- ond license, licenses were prepared for both com- Imposing tough obligations on operators may panies specifying in advance important elements seem good for the country, but it can force reg- of the regulatory regime. This reduced regulatory ulators into untenable situations. In particular, uncertainty for the investors, eased the regulatory setting stiff rollout obligations, with investments commission's burden of establishing a new regu- that go far beyond what is commercially viable latory regine from scratch, and served the public at the time of privatization, risks forcing compa- interest by addressing regulatory issues that often nies to undertake bad investments, leads opera- become problems elsewhere. tors to demand special privileges (such as longer exclusivity), and creates a need for renegotiation There are many other cases of prepackaged rules. later. The 1982 telecommunications law of Chile, for example, requires dominant operators' prices to Focus licensing on the main operators be revised every five years using marginal cost pricing and to be indexed between revisions. Many services can be provided without license, perhaps subject only to declaration for the pub- Establish rules for interconnection lic record and for statistical purposes. Class licenses can be automatically granted to any Ideally, interconnection agreements could be applicant meeting set criteria. Bidding should be treated simply as a commercial matter to be used to allocate any licenses that will be restricted agreed between the parties. But interconnection in number, such as for the use of radio frequen- disputes have become so common, and the cies when demand exceeds supply. The World Bank Group 37 That was the strategy used by El Salvador in to rebalance telephone prices to make local ser- restructuring its telecommunications sector in vice profitable-as compensation for reneging 1997. Licenses are required for using the radio on license provisions allowing newly privatized spectrum but not for operating networks or ser- telecommunications companies to index their vices. Network operators are free to establish prices to inlation. But it took more than six years prices and conditions for the services they pro- to reach a final decision on the rebalancing. vide to end users as well as to each other, but Meanwhile, business users faced long-distance must grant access to essential services on a prices that were up to fifty times cost, and inter- nondiscriminatory basis. Defined by law, essen- national prices some four times those in neigh- tial services are interconnection, signaling, caller boring countries. These distortions created identification, billing data, number poltability, artificial incentives to use foreign callback and and directory databases. calling cardl services, which may have siphoned off about a fourth of Argentina's international The regulator in El Salvador is informed of the telephone revenues (Artana, Navajas, and terms of access, monitors fairness and compliance Urbizondo 1998). (The lesson was learned: pri- with the law, and resolves disputes if parties fail to vatizations in gas and electricity were preceded agree. The law prescribes in detail the process for by rate rebalancing.) the regulatory agency to follow in all decision- making. NVhile the terms of interconnection are to The experience in Mexico was only somewhat bet- be agreed among the parties, disputes are to be ter. Before privatization in 1990 large taxes on settled by the regulator, with the aid of qualified telecommunications bills were converted to tariff external experts and based on long-run average elements, improving alignment with costs. The incremental costs. The regulator also administers task was left to the privatized operator to complete the radio spectrum and the numbering system under a timetable linked to its exclusivity period, (including codes for customer selection of carriers) but progress on rebalancing and investment was on demand or-for spectrum-using auctions slower than expected. Near the end of the period when demand exceeds available capacity. the operator argued, unsuccessfully, for more time to rebalance prices before it faced competition in Surprisingly, even countries that adopt fairly pro- 1996. By contrast, in lTganda in 1998, prices for competitive policies frorm the start often write into most telecommunications services were substan- law a requirement to license all entrants. This tially rebalanced and liberalized before the award places an excessive burden on the regulator- of the second national operator's license, con- and the operators-and creates opportunity for tributing to the high level of investment today. The discretion, pressure, and corruption. number of telephone lines, including cellular, increased by more than 48 percent in the year after Rebalance prices early the license was awarded in April 1998. Leaving it to privatized companies to rebalance Since new entrants will often have little market prices invites difficulties for the regulator as well power, an alternative is to leave prices unregu- as for the companies. In Argentina, for example, lated and allow price competition to lead to rate failure to rebalance before privatization, coupled rebalancing by the incumbent. with broad institutional weaknesses, led to years of conflict involving the regulatory agency, reg- Reduce re(ulation as competition develops ulated companies, the government, opposition parties, consumer associations, and various judi- Because a fundamental rationale for regulation cial courts. In 1991, after adoption of a currency is to respond to operators that have significant board system made local currency price index- market power or control scarce resources, regu- ing for inflation illegal, the government agreed lators should be able to reduce or end regulation 38 Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications as competition develops, and instead permit a minister attempted to block the regulator's tariff general commercial rules to apply. Thus in rebalancing order in 1999, public outcry followed Canada the telecommunications regulator is and the government supported the regulator. required to forbear exercising its regulatory pow- ers where it finds markets to be sufficiently com- Harness public support petitive for regulation to be unnecessary (for example, most wireless and long-distance ser- The sustainability of a regulatory agency will vices of all carriers, including the main telephone eventually depend on public trust and support. companies). In Chile the antimonopoly commis- Thus the agency needs to be seen as addressing sion determines what telecommunications ser- issues important for customers, not just arbitrat- vices are to be subject to price regulation. This ing on highly technical matters. Although the trend of treating telecommunications as a trad- issues valued by customers will vary from coun- able service, subject to general commercial and try to country, they could include billing accuracy trading rules, is also seen at the regional level- and practices, operators' terms and conditions of notably in the European Union-and under the service (including customer redress), quality of World Trade Organization (WTO). service, geographic coverage, and access by non- subscribers to communal facilities, such as pay Enhance regulatory credibility phones and tclcccnters. Enhancing credibility can also do much to Often, telecommunications reform involves strengthen regulation in an environment of weak losses for concentrated and influential vested governance. Critical steps include ensuring ade- interests-such as monopoly owners, managers, quate legislative provisions on agency jurisdic- or employees-and gains for highly dispersed tion, autonomy, access to information, timeliness customers. This outcome is typical where there is of the appeal process, enforceability of decisions, large unmet demand for services, and occurs not staggered terms of office for commissioners, and only at the time of sector restrticturing but also inability to remove commissioners except for later, in a myriad of regulatory decisions. Since cause. But other measures are also in order. regulatory agencies in almost all countries oper- ate in a political environment, strengthening cus- Adopt open regulatory processes tomer associations to advocate customer interests can help facilitate agency decisions that promote Transparency in decisionmaking enhances the a broad public interest. The Canadian Radio- credibility of agencies and the legitimacy of television and Ielecommunications Commission decisions. This in turn helps ensure that decisions for many years has arranged funding for cus- will not be overturned arbitrarily, increasing tomer groups that contribute to its proceedings. investor confidence. Public consultation on major regulatory issues adds to transparency' by educat- Undertake international commitments ing the regulatory authority and interested parties about the facts of an issue and the merits of alter- Governments can take steps that formally com- native solutions. Using consultative papers has mit them beyond the boundaries of their own several advantages: administrative simplicity, legal environment to apply the rules of the game. broad reach, and quick decisions. The Tele- Countries that subscribed to the 1997 NWTO communications Regulatory Authority of India agreement on basic telecommunications entered adopted this approach, issuing consultative a binding international comirmitment to imple- papers in 1997 and 1998 (for example, on prices, ment specific reforms, apply a common set of service quality, the numbering plan, and the regulatory principles and practices, and recog- process for determining the license fees) and nize the WTO as an avenue for intergovern- soliciting comments from interested parties. When mental appeal. Sovereign loans and credits from The World Bank Group 39 multilateral development organizations such as There is a risk, however, that altemative dispute the World Bank involve formal government resolution procedures will be used to delay or obligations that can he tailored to reduce regu- sideline diFficult decisions that the regulators do latory risk, such as the risk that the government not want to face. The incumbent operator may will fail to abide by the pricing rule established have incentives to let the process drag on. To avoid in the license. this, the dispute resolution process should include: * Firm deadlines for completing the process. Use resources effectively * Authority to empower the arbitrator or media- tor to obtain information, schedule meetings, The skills required by a regulatory agency vary and recommend a decision if the process fails. w,idely as the focus of regulatory action shifts * Rcgulatory or other sanctions for noncompli- from relationships between operators and gov- ance. ernment (licensing) to relationships between operators (interconnection) to relationships bet- Put the operators to work ween operators and consumers (prices, com- plaints). Relying mainly on internal skills is In most countries the greatest concentration of unlikely to be the best way to obtain (and dis- telecommunications sector knowledge is in the pose of) the wide range of skills needed in a operating companies. This information asvm- timely way. There are a number of other options. metry places the regulator at a disadvantage, hut it is possible to turn the tables by putting the reg- Outsource regulatory functions ulated cornpanies to work for the regulator. The Chilean telecommunications law requires the Many regulatory functions can be contracted out. regulated companies-not the regulator-to Audit firms can monitor compliance with perfor- prepare detailed proposals every five years for mance commitments in operating licenses, inter- revising prices along the lines prescribed in the connection rules, and tariff rules. In Argentina a law. The regulator reviews the proposals with private contractor monitors use of the radio spec- the help of consultanits and solicits coimments trum on behalf of the regulatory agency, keeping from other interested parties. Once satisfied that part of the annual license fees as payment for its a proposal is consistent svith the law and cur- services. And external experts can resolve dis- rent best practice, the regulator approves it, and putes among operators and with the regulator, the propo( sal remains in force for five years. leaving final decisions (such as applying penal- ties) in the hands of the regulator. Consider multisectoral agencies Adopt alternative dispute resolution Many emerging economies cannot afford the financial and human resource costs of a separate Disputes and conflicts increasingly arise between regulatory agency for each sector. Since network incumbent operators and new entrants. between industries--gas, water, electricity, transportation- new entrants, and between operators and regu- have much in common (but also important differ- lators. Regulatory, administrative, and judicial re- ences), a multisectoral agency can be consideredl. sources may be quickly overwlhelmed by the Such an agency could afford a better core staff number and complexity of cases. A broad range versed in generic regulatory processes, finance, of alternative dispute avoidance and resolution law,, and administration than each sector agency methods can he used in the telecommunications could separately (though sector-specific teams sector, including negotiation, mediation, and would still be required). And a multisectoral arbitration. These methods can be presented in agency is less likely to be captured by any one the telecommunications law, the licenses, or con- operating company or controlled by any one sec- tracts of sale. tor ministry. U.S. public utility commissions 40 Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Telecommunications typically regulate gas, electricity, local telecommu- Conclusion nications, and sometimes water at the state level, but not mail, broadcasting, interstate telecommu- There is no universal prescription that can nications, or radio spectrum. guarantee success in launching new telecommu- nications regulatory framewxorks, especially in A multisectoral agency does not necessarily economies with weak governance. But the ele- imply a single agency for all infrastructure or ments outlined in this Note can do much to public utility sectors. Care must be taken to increase the chances of success even in these avoid an overcrowded portfolio of responsibili- environments. These elements are being tried, ties and undue concentration of power, and to usually a few at a time, in several countries. It will take account of differences in the reform and be some time before we can draw firm conclu- market (levelopmnent stage of sectors. Further- sions on their effectiveness. Nonetheless, given more, if regulatory agencies are to be merged or the limited chances of success for more narrowly restructured, it is vitally important to maintain defined solutions in countries with weak gover- credibility and effectiveness during the transi- nance, all these elements should bc systemati- tion period. Examples of multisectoral commu- cally considered wlhen designing regulatory nications regulatory agencies with limited scope arrangements in countries now embarking on are the Canadian Radio-television ancd Telecom- sector reforms. munications Commission and the Uganda Communications Commission, which is respon- References sible for mail and radio spectrum management tana, an 9 utnDaniel. Fernalndo N.avaas, .and Salntialgo L rbizondlo. I')')X as well as telecommunications. "Contractal Adaptation in Regulated Utilities: A Few Observations front Argentina." Fundlacidn de Investigacionrcs Econnicihs Create regional capacity Latinoarnericanas, BLuenos Aires. Levy, Brian. and liablo T Spiller, ecds. 1996. /egulti/on.s, his/iutat/ons arid (mrmrnoni'ot. Cwnpiratipnre S9,idirs in ?/t /mvniniti viotn//nns Countries that have some federalization of gov- Camlbridge: Camnlrtidge dTniversity lPress. ernment functions among them could share a reg- Null, Roger G. 1998. TeieCOtnTninicatins Reforni in Developing Cduntries. World Bank. \Washington. D.C ulatory agency or technical secretariat. The five NLIltv Tirnotly E., andl Eric Scineidewincle. 1989. lRegulatory linlicty countries of the Organization of Eastern Carib- for Teleconnunicatimns In Blorn NAellenius, lieter Stern irnothid bean States are working toward a common E. Nnlry. and Riclhard D Stein, eds., Restrutecttring intAc/lancging the Tetectirnmnrnicnntion7.s ct/n-i Washington, D C.: Worirld Bank. telecommunications law and a single telecommu- Saitli, Peter. 1995. -'Subscrihaing ro Mnonpolv 'the Telecom nications regulatory agency much like their com- Molnopolists Lexicn-lRevisited) Public Po/icy} fir1 the Prinate mon Central Bank and Civil A-viation Authority. Seccor (Septernher). ...- . 1997 "What the Transtcfrnation rmf Tclecrn Markets xe.ns Where a shared agency is politically infeasible, the fur tgtitin Public Rn/icy/or the Pri ratc Sec/er (September) regulatory agency of one country could provide Wellenius, Bjnrn. Fothconung. Regulating tite Teleconmimunications regulatory services to other countries tinder con- Sector. In LLcigi Maizetti, el., Regulation in Pos-Privatizatton PE1ziroitmzen/.r 7/e Lottir Atiteriea,t iXpettc oc tract or as part of a regional economic coopera- tion agreement such as the Southern African Development Community. Another possibility is to establish core teams of reulatory experts llenis (bwellenisworldbank.org), gulato' y experts in Telecommunications and Iniformatics Division regional centers to support countries on demand, as proposed in the Africa Connection program and endorsed in 1999 by the Organization of African Unity. Besides sharing the regulatory load, all these arrangements aid learning across coun- tries and could result in a degree of regulatory uni- formity allowing commercial aggregation of small mark-ets into larger, more viable ones. 41 Competition in Mobile Telecoms Carlo Maria Rossotto, Michel Keuf, andJeff ey Robhfs Many governments, particularly in developing and emerging rnarket economies, still doubt the benefits of competition in wireless services. But international experience shows that competition in any of the digital technologies brings substantial benefits to users and creates powerful incentives for incumbent fixed-line operators to lower prices, introduce new services, and increase productivity. This Note explores the impact of competition on mobile service using data on Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) technology. Launched in Europe in 1992, GSM networks have grown by up to 80 percent a year and now reach an estimated 135 million subscribers in nearly 130 countries (table 1). Competition in the GSM market is nowr a global where GS;M contributes most of the growth in trend. More than seventy countries have at least installed lines. Second operators are also present two GSM providers (figure 1).' Most Eastern in East and South Asia. Competition has been EEuropean countries, preparing for accession to introduced in many countries in the Middle East the European Union, have licensed two GSM and North Africa (Egypt, Lebanon, Morocco). providers, and second operators are emerging in Several Sub-Saharan African countries (C6te many countries of the Commonwealth of d'Ivoire, Madagascar, Tanzania) have also intro- Independent States (Russia, Ukraine, the Baltics), duced a second GSM operator. Where it exists, TABLE 1 GLOBAL SUBSCRIBERS FIGURE 1 COMPETITION IN GSM SERVICES, AUGUST 1999 BY TECHNOLOGY, MARCH 1999 Subscribers -45 (millions) GSM 129 135 -"4 AMPS 95 76 4 PDC 1 39 CDMA 17 20 * Competition 1 Single GSM provider TDMA 36 18 * Competition in some areas No GSM TACS 24 14 Note: Competition means that a country has two or more licensed GSM operators, NMT 35 3 and competition in some areasthatthe competing operators' service areas largely do not overlap. Source: Based on GSM Association data. Source: Ericsson, Global Mobile. 42 Competition in Mobile Telecoms TABLE 2 GROWTH IN THE CELLULAR MARKET BEFORE AND AFTER GSM COMPETITION Percentage growth in number of subscribers oped markets, such as Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Philippines, and Romania, GSM competition has Belgium 85 116 125 marked the transition from a niche to a mass Estonia 121 127 market. In Romania, where GSM competition Italy 26 57 81 was introduced in early 1997, the number of sub- scribers increased thirteenfold-from 16,000 to Phmaniippins 1 15300 44 225,000-by the end of that year. In more mature Romania 37 1,300 44 markets, where a single provider of GSM services Singapore 42 90 57b had achieved average growth rates of 30 to 50 Taiwan (China) 19 58 37 percent, such as Singapore, Taiwan (China), and most of Western Europe, GSM competition has .. Notavailable. incrcased those rates to 60 to 90 percent (table a. Year in which competition starts. 2). The market growth effect holds regardless of b. Estimate. Souirce: Financial Times Mobile Communications; Strategic Policy Research. GDP per capita and cellular penetration before competition. GSM competition also reduces the price of cel- competition has given rise to strong growth in lular services. In several competitive markets the the mobile telecommunications market. (In average price of a call from a GSM handset is 40 Japan and Latin America and the Caribbean. to 50 percent lower than in markets with a sin- where GSM is not widely adopted, competition gle provider. In the Middle East and North Africa among other technologies is widespread.) it is Lebanon, where competition is most intense, that has the lowest prices (7 cents a minute, Even countries with very low per capita incomes against a regional average of 40 to 50 cents a are able to sustain at least two cellular operators. minute). Prices have fallen sharply in several Second operators are ernerging in countries with markets in Western Europe. Four years after the a GDP per capita of less than US$1,000, such as introduction of competition tariffs had dropped Azerbaijan, Bangladesh., C6te d'Ivoire, Georgia, by as much as 60 percent in Norw^ay, and as and Uganda. The Philippines, Romania, and many much as 70 percent in Germany. other countries with a GDP per capita between US$1,000 and US$2,000 are experiencing strong Another positive development of competitive growth in the nAobile miar-ket as a result of the intro- digital cellular markets is the emergence of a duction of GSM competition. In Estonia the pres- wider range of services. In response to the entry ence of three GSM operators has increased cellular of new competitors, incumbent operators intro- penetration-the number of celluilar phone sub- duce new features, such as caller ID, call for- scribers per 100 people--to 13 percent. warding, and call wAaiting. In several industrial and emerging economies GSM competition has Even in countries with very low population den- also stimulated the introduction of prepaid cards, sity there is room for at least two GSM operators, accelerating market growth. Thus to retain or as in Botswana, Cote dIvoire, Egypt, Madagascar, increase market shares, competitors in the digi- and Tanzania. In these countries, however, net- tal cellular market both reduce prices and work developmient rermains cooncentrated around develop nrcw products arid bundle services. GSM major cities and more densely populated areas. competition generally has not prevented contin- ued expansion of wireline services, whether in Effects on the telecoms market mature markets or emerging economies (figulre 2). In some countries (Estonia, Romania) the rate Cellular competition often brings with it growth of growth in fixed lines increased after the intro- in the cellular market. In relatively underdevel- duction of a second GSM operator. The World Bank Group 43 FIGURE 2 GROWTH IN FIXED LINES BEFORE AND AFTER GSM COMPETITION Perceit 30 Finally, the introduction of new cellular players 25 * YC-1 in the market, capable of offering new services | C YC and attracting new subscribers, tends to increase 20 * YC+1 overall investment as well as revenues in tele- 15 communications (table 3). Revenues grow both 10 because the overall number of subscribers, for 10 fixed and mobile networks, increases, and 5 because the new cellular services generate par- 0 Ei n ta M P Ro_ania Singa- ticularly high revenues, given mobile customers' Belgium Estonia Italy Malaysia Philip- Romania Singa- willingness to pay higher prices. pines pore Note: Yiisthe year in which competition starts. Effects on the incumbent Source: International Telecommunication Union; Strategic Policy Research. Evidence from both industrial and emerging economies shows that introducing GSM compe- cent in 1997-98, Eesti Mobiltelefon holds about titiori does not buit the operationial and financial 60 perceint of the GSM market (table 4). performance of the incumbent operator. The threat of competition alone is usually enough to Nor does the advent of competition in the GSM cause the incumbent operator to adopt a series market seem to harm the incumbent's prof- of changes to sustain its competitive edge. In itability. The large investments in GSM infra- Morocco, for example, where the authorities structure that incumbents typically make as gave notice that GSM competition would be competitive pressures increase reflect strong introduced in 1999, the incumbent began to confidence in the continued profitability of their rapidly expand its GSM network and reduce its GSM operations. And when the incumbent is a tariffs to consolidate its market position well provider of both fixed and mobile services, its before competition was actually introduced. overall piofitability does not seem to suffer either. In some countries for which data are As new GSM operators start to enter the market. available, the incumbent's overall profitability the incumbent maintains its efforts to increase its has tended to increase. A typical example is competitiveness, enabling it to enlarge its sub- Spain, where the incumbent operator increased scriber base and rctain a large share of the grow- its revenues by 72 percent in the year in which ing GSM market. This scenario is typical in both competition was introduced, and by 31 percent industrial and emerging economies. In Belgium in the year before. In the same period the the incumbent operator, Belgacom Mobile, has growth rate of profits increased from 8 percent expanded from about 200,000 subscribers at the to 16 percent. beginning of 1996, the year in which competi- tion was introduced, to more than 900,000 today. Current policy trends Italy's incumbent operator, Telecom Italia Mobile, has increased its subscriber base from As the benefits of cellular competition become about 2 million at the end of 1995, when com- more apparent, a growing number of gov- petition from Omnitel was introduced, to about ernments are taking steps to ensure that new 12 million today, retaining about 72 percent of cellular operators can compete effectively with the mobile telecommunications market and 65 the incurmbent operator. One of the most percent of the GSM segment. Estonia's incum- important--and arduous-tasks is to promote bent operator, Eesti Mobiltelefon, more than and enforce appropriate interconnection agree- doubled its number of subscribers after the entry ments between the incumbent operator and its of two operators in the GSM market. Having competitors. Adequate regulatory mechanisms achieved annual growth rates as high as 98 per- are also important to implement national and 44 Competition in Mobile Telecoms TABLE 3 TELECOMMUNICATIONS REVENUES BEFORE AND AFTER GSM COMPETITION Percent Belgium 1.6 5 1.7 11 1.8C 21 Estonia 2.7 7 2.9 9 Italy 1.8 14 1.9 21 1.9c 34 Philippines 1.4 10 1.3 18 1.3 32 Romania 1.2 1 1.6 9 Singapore 3.0 22 3.3 25 3.6c 38 .. Not available. a. Year in which competition starts. b. Conservative estimates. c. Estimate. Source: International Telecommunication Union; Strategic Policy Research. international roaming agreements between mobile operators. TABLE 4 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Even with the best regulatory rules, however, it is INCUMBENT'S MOBILE difficult to ensure that cellular competitors are AFTER GSM COMPETITION always granted access to the incumbent's network Thousands under fair conditions. As a result European Union members and other countries have granted new GSM operators the right to build their own long- distance and international gateway facilities. This right allows the new competitors to offer the full Belgium 185 378 675 range of local, long-distance, and international Chile 57 115 182 services without having to rely on the network of Estonia 13 26 53 the incumbent operator. And it brings competitive France 44 370 700 pressures to bear on the price of intercity leased Italy 467 1,910 5,600 line circuits and on the price of long-distance and Latvia 10 27 65 international communications. Mexico 1.048 1,900 Other steps can also bc taken to ensure that cel- Netherlands 68 241 484 lular operators are able to provide the full range Romania .. 20 200 of services possible w-ith modern digital tech- Z, ~~~~~~~Not available. nology. GSM operators are increasingly allowed a. Not ilable. a. Year in which competition starts. to provide fixed as well as mobile wireless ser- Source:International Telecommunication Union; vices, to transmit data as well as voice_ and to Strategic Policy Research. develop private as well as public networks. In this Note GSM refers to a range of interoperable technologies, including GSM 800, GSM 900, DCS 1800, and PCS 190D. Carlo laria Rossotto (crossotto@wuorldhank.org), Carlrs Braga, Ermminuel Forestier, Peter Smitl, SvetosLiv Tintchev, Teleconmmunications Division. 114fichel Kerf Eloy Vidal, and B3jorn NWellenius contributed to to this Notc. n,hidedle eEast andStrAa ortt Afrca Region, andfqffrey I n Notlth Am-erica, mainlv thirougi the PCS 1900 technol<,gy. Rohlfs; Strategic Polic~y Resevarchp, _faryland 45 Private Participation in Port Facilities Recent Trends Dirk Soinmer The private sector has become increasingly adopting the landlord model. Under this The World Bank's Private involved in the operation of common-user port approach public port authorities retain their reg- Participation in facilities during the 1990s, following public sec- ulatory functions and continue to own the land ProjectDatabase covers tor dominance of the sector since the 1940s. and basic infrastructure assets such as berths and private participation in During the past decade the reform of port admin- breakwater facilities. But they divest themselves infrastructure in istration has gained momentum in industrial and of the managerial and financial responsibility fo hdeveloping countries. istration ha andmmnu nidsra n ftemngra n iaca epniiivfor The database records developing countries alike. Between 1990 and commercial facilities such as terminals and details of all projects 1998, 112 port projects with private participation equipment in the port area. owned or managed by reached financial closure in twenty-eight devel- private compan as oping countries, with investment commitments Before the 1990s private involvement in manag- water, electricity, totaling more than US$9 billion (figures 1 and 2; ing and financing ports was largely limited to telecommunications, Z-1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~natural gas transmission boxes 1 and 2). This trend is set to continue. captive facilities. These facilities, typically for and distribution, and bulk cargo, are often vertically integrated into transport-the road, Public port agencies have been moving away production processes and not actively promoted seaport, airport, and from the service port model, under which the for use by third parties (figure 3). During this raNlroadmsectors Tpjs port authority provides all commercial services period private involvement in common-user in port infrastructure that as well as regulatory functions, and increasingly ports was limited to a few projects: Kingston reached financiadlclosure between 1990 and 1998. It describes regional trends in and types of private sector involvement. FIGURE 1 PORT PROJECTS WITH PRIVATE FIGURE 2 TOTAL INVESTMENT IN PORT PARTICIPATION IN DEVELOPING PROJECTS WITH PRIVATE COUNTRIES, 1990-98 PARTICIPATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, 1990-98 1998 US$ millions 25 2,500 20 2,000 15 1,500 10 1,000 5 500 0 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 Source: PPI Project Database. Source: PPI Project Database. 46 Private Participation in Port Facilities-Recent Trends Database coverage Operations and management contract with * To be included in the database, a project must major capital expenditure. A private consor- have reached financial closure and directly or tium takes over the management of a state- indirectly serve the general public. owned enterprise for a given period during * The sectors covered are electricity, natural which the private entity also assumes signif- gas, telecommunications, transport, and icant investment risk. This category includes water. build-transfer-operate, build-lease-transfer, * The transport sector includes the following and build-rehabilitate-operate-transfer con- subsectors: airports, seaports, rail, and road. tracts as applied to existing facilities. The seaport subsector includes general cargo * Greenfieldproject. A private entity or a public- and container terminals, bulk cargo facilities, private joint venture builds and operates a and port access channels. new facility. This category includes build- * The database excludes movable assets, incin- own-transfer and build-own-operate contracts erators, stand-alone solid waste projects, and as well as merchant power plants. small projects such as windmills. * Divestiture. A private consortium buys an * The period covered is 1984-98. equity stake in a state-owned enterprise. The T The database covers developing countries, as private stake may or may not imply private defined and classified by the World Bank, in management of the company. East Asia and the Pacific, Europe and Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Definition of financial closure. For greenfield pro- Middle East and North Africa, South Asia, and jects, and for operations and management con- Sub-Saharan Africa. tracts with major capital expenditure, financial closure is defined as the existence of a legally Definition of private participation. The private binding commitment of equity holders or debt company must assume operating risk during the financiers to provide or mobilize funding for the operating period or assume development and project The funding must account for a significant operating risk during the contract period. In part of the project cost, securing the construction addition, the operator must consist of one or of the facility. For operations and management more corporate entities with significant private contracts, a lease agreement or a contract autho- equity participation that are separate from any rizing the commencement of management or lease government agency. A foreign state-owned com- service must exist. For divestitures, the equity pany is considered a private entity. holders must have a legally binding commitment to acquire the assets of the facility. Definition of a project unit. A corporate entity created to operate infrastructure facilities is Sources considered a project. When two or more physi- * World Wide Web. cal facilities are operated by the same corporate * Commercial databases. entity, all are considered as one project. * Specialized publications. * Developers and sponsors. Project types * Regulatory agencies. * Operations and management contract. A pri- vate entity takes over the management of a Contact. The database is maintained by the Pri- state-owned enterprise for a given period. vate Participation in Infrastructure Group of the This category includes management contracts World Bank. For more information contact Mina and leases. Salehi at 202 473 7157 or msalehi@worldbank.org. The World Bank Group 47 BOX 2 PPI PROJECT DATABASE: RECORDING OF INVESTMENT The database records investment differently for different types of projects, because project characteristics and data availability Port. in Jamaica (1967), Port Kilang, in Malaysia vary. For operations and management contracts with major capital (1986), and Manila Harbor, in the Philippines expenditure, investment is recorded as commitments of the private (1988). consortium for the entire contract period at closure. For the Aguas Argentinas water concession, for example, investment was Thiven sh twowmard privater inolemntha benrecorded as US$4 billion, the commitment at financial closure in driven by two main factors: * The strong growth in world trade' has led cap- 1994. Most transport and water projects are operations and man- tive port users-unable to switch to other agement contracts with major capital expenditure. transport modes, such as railways or airports, For greenfield projects, investment is recorded as commit- or to other ports-to put enormous political ments for the entire contract period where those commitments pressure on authorities to improve handling are clearly defined. For example, the US$1.6 billion investment efficiency, i-educe port user fees, and expand in the Hub Power Company was recorded in 1994, when the facilities to accommodate larger cargo flows. poweir plant reached financial closure. For other greenfield pro- Yet many public port authorities have had only jects, investments and license fees are recorded periodically. limited success in improving labor and other For the Czech mobile phone operator Polkomtel, investments in practices to increase the productivity and effi- network expansions are reported every year there is a major ciency of= existing installations. Economie of exisca instaclargons. simnhaeldexpansion, and license fees are registered in the first year of tEonomthe of emrecale of carfewglobaim players id operations. Greenfield projects are predominantly in electricity to the emergence of a few global players inadtlcmmnctos shipping, able to control the allocation of trans- and telecommunications. shipment business to strategicallv located, well- Foir divestitures, privatization revenues are reported annually, equipped, and efficiently managed hub ports.' and postprivatization investments in privatized companies managed To stay competitive, port authorities have to by private consortia are tracked. For Telmex, for example, divesti- modernize and upgrade port facilities to meet ture revenues are registered annually. And since the sale of a con- the needs of the large shipping lines. But with trolling stake in Telmex to a private consortium, the company's larger ships, the advance of containerization, annual investments have been reported as additional investments. and the introduction of sophisticated cargo For Korea Telecom, only divestiture revenues are tracked, since the information systems, the investment required government still owns the controlling stake. Divestitures are pre- has often gone beyond the financial and man- dominantly in electricity and telecommunications. agerial capacities of public port authorities. This Note, which draws on the World Bank's PPI Project Database, provides an overview of the only a single case of a concession for channel emerging patterns and trends in private involve- dredging and maintenance, awarded in the Rio ment in ports in developing countries. The data- Parana. Part of the project revenues will come base does not track very small projects3 and from direct charges to the future channel users covers only seaports that operate on a common- by the concessionaire. user basis. The database covers only twenty-one bulk facilities, since most are operated as captive The database depicts two distinct patterns: facilities. (Thirteen are dry bulk handling facili- Long-term concession contracts involving pri- ties, for grain or coal, transferred to private man- vate operation and management and signifi- agement, and eight are liquid bulk facilities cant private investment in existing public developed by the private sector.) Among the assets have been the most common arrange- public port facilities attracting private involve- ments: the ownership of land has in most cases ment that have been included in the database, remained with the public port authority. most have been container terminals (sixty-two Private investment has fostered the rehabilita- transactions). The rest have been smaller ports tion of terminals and the renewal of super- handling general and bulk cargo. There has been structure, such as cranes and yard equipment. 48 Private Participation in Port Facilities-Recent Trends FIGURE 3 MARITIME CARGO AND THE HANDLING FACILITIES REQUIRED Verticall integrated. M caiptive facilities Common- ufser facilities Reflecting a pattern observed in other infra- and insufficient infrastructure in East Asia have stricture sectors, most transactions have taken meant a larger role for new port facilities (green- place in Latin America and East Asia. Within field projects) in that region and also explain the regions, the distribution of projects has been high volume of investment there, as in Malaysia. uneven, with five countries accounting for In Latin America the private sector has more roughly half the projects in all developing often taken over existing infrastructure assets countries. and invested in refurbishing and modernizing superstructure, focusing on increasing the effi- Concessions involving major private ciency and productivity of existing assets. investments dominate Twenty of the 112 projects are structured as In most projects the new private port operators operations and management contracts without have taken on significant investment obligations investment commitments. In these projects pri- for expansion and modernization of existing vate operators have leased existing port infra- facilities (commonly buildings and equipment), structure. Lease contracts have reached closure assutning fu,ll commercial risks for the facilities. for facilities in Latin America (eight projects) and The public port authorities, with few exceptions, Sub-Saharan Africa (two). In East Asia, Thailand have retained obligations for investment in (Laem Chabang) and the Republic of Korea berths and breakwater facilities and maintenance (Pusan, Kwangyang) have awarded leases to of access channels. operate new container facilities financed by the public sector. Three-quarters of the 112 projects are operations and management contracts with significant cap- Divestiture has played a limited role in the port ital expenditure for ex:isting facilities (forty-nine sector. In the Russian Federation ports have been projects) or greenfield development (thirty-five). transformned into joint stock companies through -Most of Llese projects are in Latin Aimerica (eighlt voucher privatizatioin. The stevedorirlg coniipa- greenfield projects and twenty-nine conces- nies, usually former divisions of the port, have sions) or East Asia (eighteen greenfield projects been assigned ownership rights to parts of the and thirteen concessions). Rapid growth in trade port infrastructure, such as real estate in the port The World Bank Group 49 TABLE 1 PORT PROJECTS WITH PRIVATE PARTICIPATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BY REGION, 1990-98 area (St. Petersburg). or to shares in the port Total investment company (Vladivostock). with the state retaining Region (1998 US$ millions) a 49 percent owQnership. In Brazil captive port facilities have been divested in the context of pri- East Asia and the Pacific 38 5,410.5 vatization in oil, steel, and mining and have since been opened to third-party access (Tubarao, San Europe and Central Asia 8 23.4 Nicolas). Latin America and the Caribbean 48 2,497.7 Middle East and North Africa 5 376.5 Private involvement remains South Asia 9 942.6 regionally concentrated Sub-Saharan Africa 4 32.0 Latin America and East Asia have clearly led the Total 112 9,282.7 trend in private involvement in port operations, Source: PPI Project Database. both in the number of projects reaching financial closure and in investment commitments (table 1). This regional pattern is largely consistent with trends in other infrastructure sectors, such as handling charges significantly. mostly through electricity and water and sewerage.' Within these improved labor productivity, but has also led to regions, projects and investments are unevenly consolidations among the terminals.( distributed. Five countries accounted for half the projects reaching financial closure in 1990-98. Panama and Mexico transferred their major port and more than 65 percent of committed invest- facilities to the private sector between 1995 and ment (figures 4 and 5). 1998. Panama attracted more than US$380 mil- lion in investments for four facilities under pri- Latin America and the Caribbean vate management-Manzanillo International Terminal, Col6n Container Terminal, and the Latin America and the Caribbean, with poor per- ports in Cristobal and Balboa; all are strong com- formance by public ports and strong growth in petitors in the container transshipment market. trade, turned to private participation in ports in Mexico avwarded concessions for its major port the early 1990s. By 1998 seven countries- facilities in Manzanillo, Ensenada, Altamira, and Argentina, the Bahamas, Brazil, Colombia, Veracruz. Jamaica, Mexico, and Panama-had transferred control of port facilitics to the private scctor. Brazil started its port privatization program in 1997 with concessions for the container termi- Colombia led the way in 1993, awarding con- nals in Santos and Rio Grande. Following the cessions for the management of its four major Argentine model, it awarded concessions for sin- general cargo ports to public-private consortia gle terminals. with a majority of votes held by local private companies. These consortia then subconces- In most of the Latin American projects the pri- sioned private terminal operators.' vate operators have been able to attract signifi- cant private capital investment to refurbish Argentina. as part of a broad program of private infrastrLuctLure assets and modernize cargo han- involvement in public infrastructure services, dling equipment. The private terminals have awarded concessions for the terminals of its improved the quality of service and reduced main port, Buenos Aires, to four competing pri- costs (although handling charges remain high by vate port operators in 1994. The stiff competition international standards), especially where com- within the port and from a greenfield facility in petition from other terminals in the port or the province of Buenos Aires has brought down among neighboring ports has been strong. 50 Private Participation in Port Facilities-Recent Trends FIGURE 4 TOP TEN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BY NUMBER OF PORT PROJECTS WITH PRIVATE PARTICIPATION, 1990-98 20 for many years. The Philippines, too, involved the 15 private sector early, handiing over management of its major container facilities at the Port of Manila to International Container Terminal Services in 10 1988. China, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Mvan- mar. Thailand, and Vietnam have turned to the 5 * N N N N m private sector since the mid-1980s to manage and invest in port terminals. Malaysia awarded Kelang Container Terminal -o - vo , NGO e P ~; < / t(KCT) a txxenty-one-year lease contract to man- age and develop container facilities at Port Klang in 1986 and awarded a concession for the port's Note: India and Indonesia both have four projects. bulk operations to a private consortium, Klang Source: PPI Project Database. Polt Management (KPM), in 1993. Between 1992 and 1998 Malavsia attracted significant invest- FIGURE 5 TOP TEN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BY ment commitments for seven other major port INVESTMENT IN PORT PROJECTS WITH PRIVATE projects. The most important is Klang West Port, PARTICIPATION, 1990-98 which reached closure in 1994. This project will 1998 US$ millions compete with the other operators in Port Klang 2,500 as well as with the region's dominant transship- ment hub, the port of Singapore. In December 2,000 1998 KCT and KPMI announced a merger of their operations to achieve economies of scale and 1,500 cost effectiveness. Whether the resulting loss of competitive pressure will be balanced by the 1.000 emergence of Klang W`est Port remains to be seen. 500 China opened the management of its ports to the private sector beginning in 1991. The Hong Kong ° 4F 8 .;;S §> *4> , Port operator, Hutchison Whampoa, took over \§ <,< XO *s qe,kN sf *9# Qq>bes'+the development and management of container 4h 1 $ 9 facilities in Shanghai in 1993 and in Yantian in 1994. Bv 1998 thirtcen facilitics in China were Source: PPi Project Database. managed by the private sector. Private operations are generally structured as joint ventures with the public port authorities: the competition within Sustaining that competition will depend on a reg- ports seen in Latin America is rare in China. ulaton, framework that promotes competition not only among terminals and ports but also Indonesia introduced private management in among different modes of transport. 1995, transferring the Koja container terminal at Tanjung Priok Port. The project ran into difficul- East Asia and the Pacific ties amid the political and economic turmoil of thc financial crisis, and thc statc-owned port In East Asia and the Pacific the model for private company, PT Pelabuhan Indonesia II, canceled managemcnt of port facilities has been the port of the concession contract and took over the facil- Hong Kong, which has been privately managed itv in 1998. The World Bank Group 51 Elsewhere in the region, Korea (Pusan, tized port facilities. Foreign involvement in man- Kwangyang) and Thailand (Laem Chabang) aging and 1financing port infrastructure through granted leases for government-owned port facil- 1997 was limited to a lease contract in 1995 for ities to the private sector. Mvanmar, Thailand, one minor container facility in Vostochny Port. and Vietnam have attracted minor private invest- Elsewhere in the region, Romania granted a ments for port facilities. license to construct and operate a grain terminal in the port of Constanta to a private consortium Middle East and North Africa in 1997. And in 1998 Latvia privatized a steve- doring company that leases quays and land from Countries in the Middle East have only recently the Riga port authority. opened up their port infrastIuctule to private involvement. Oman, the United Arab Emirates, South Asia and Yemen awarded one facility each to the pri- vate sector in 1997. The new container facilities in Port projects involving the private sector are a Oman (Port Raysut) and Yemen (Port Aden) will very recent phenomenon in South Asia, limited compete with each other mainly for transshipment to India arid Pakistan.9 In India, despite much cargo. Saudi Arabia awarded a concession for a private sector interest, only three projects-in facility in Jeddah and one for a general cargo ter- the ports of Mundra, Pipavav, and Jawaharlal minal in Dammam. And the United Arab Emirates Nehru-had reached financial closure by 1998. awarded a concession for a liquid bulk terminal in The Nhava Sheva container terminal at the the port of Fujaira. In North Africa in early 1999, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust is the only signifi- Morocco awarded a contract to a private consor- cant foreign investment. In Pakistan four con- tium for the development of a new container facil- tainer terminals and one liquid hulk facility in the ity at the port of Tangiers (Tanger-Atlantique) on ports of Karachi and Qasim reached financial a build-operate-transfer (BOT) basis. closure between 1995 and 1998. Sub-Saharan Africa Conclusion Mozambique and Kenya have been the only Private paiticipation in port operation has grown countries in Sub-Saharan Africa to award private strongly over the past decade, driven by broader contracts for port operations. Mozambique trends in the transport sector and a new under- awarded lease contracts for Maputo coal termi- standing of the public sector's role in the provi- nals in 1993 and containcr terminals in 1996.8 sion of infrastructure services. Labor unions, Kenya entered into a management contract for a wlhich play an important role in the sector, container facility with an international operator in remain highly critical of private participation, 1996 that was later canceled. But in 1998 a con- however. m-ostly because of the changes in labor sortium invested in the development of a grain rules and the workforce reductions introduced and fertilizer terminal at the port of Mombasa. by private operators. Europe and Central Asia The countries leading the way in private partic- ipation have been able to attract significant After launching a reorganization of the maritime private capital investment to refurhish infra- sector in 1991, Russia used vouchers to privatize structure assets and modernize cargo handling its major port facilities (Murmansk, Kaliningrad, equipmer.t. Under private management ports St. Petersburg. Vostochny, Vladivostock, Arkhan- have usually significantly improved their perfor- gel'sk). TIhe joint stock port companies and steve- mance, boosting labor productivity and service doring companies have had difficulties raising quality and reducing handling costs. Whether financing to expand and modernize the priva- these efficiency achievements can be sustained 52 Private Participation in Port Facilities-Recent Trends will depend in large pant on the extent to which Dirk Sonnner. Pricvate Paticipation in competitive pressures can be brought to bear on hifrastructure Grou-p private operators, through competition among ports or within ports. Sustaining competition among ports will require coordinating competition policies at a regional level to create a level playing field for ports and avoid dominance by single port operators. A broader approach-aimed at encouraging pri- vate participation and competition in the trans- port sector as a whole -would need to promote competition by ports with other transport sec- tors, such as railroad and road transport, and provide incentives for service providers to com- pete across transport netw,orks by combining transport modes. Latin Awierica reorled anntcal growth iates of 13 p"centfir ionr- chanclise inponts and 9 percent for merchaldi-,e exports in 1990 )97 while in Asia impotis gresw 9 percent and exports 7 D per- cent. according to the WVorldl Trtadc Organization's Iloernatiotta 7iade Statistics 1998 (Genesva. 1998). fl ub ports seek to consolidaLte regional cargo by connecting regional poons tbronighl feeder vessels to a msain port. the 'hUb"' thus allow- ing shipping companies to exploit economies of scle by deploying laiger vessels on long roLites, sticr as ir transoceanic transporn. Tlie Ltnloading of feeder vessels. temporan storage of fi-eighit. and load- ing of large vessels mnake up the transshipment business. For exansple. the database cItes not fulls reflect licenses frir the small private stevedoting companies that often operate state- ovned porn equipmtent. which is a common arrangenment in parts oi West Africa (Cametron. d)oe dlvonire. Gabon. Guinea. Senegal) anld Latin Anierica. See Ada Karina Izagciirre. Private Participation in, the Flectricits Sector-Recent Trends" (Public Polic t for the Rrirate Sectcg Deceinl ict 1998). nd CGiselc Silva, NicolaTs an. .ad Y-'is iYiOnmaz. P'rivate Participation in the Wbater and Senerage Sector-Recent Tt-ends' (IRblic Policfor the Prioate Sector. Septermber 1998). See also loan Gaviria. 'Port Privatization and Coimpetition :n Colombia' (RPoblic Pobict/tar the Poenare Sector, Nlarch' 1999) See Antonio Estache and Jose Carbajio "Competing Private Ports- Lessons from Argentina' (PRblic Policy for the tPi oae Sector Deceniher 1996). In earls' 1999 Hcong gong's Hitclhison WYthatpita. whicli operaites Ja va Interna.ional Ternainals :it Bojonegara Poit jointls E ith PT Pelahihhan Indonesia II. announced the acq'uisition of a 31 percent stake in msanagement of the container terminals in Jakarta cOintk ssith Pelahtuhan II. the state nowned port aLtltoritv. It acqoired the tw.ccnty year stake against corispetition from other international pnrt operators. Mozambhique also assarded thc N4 Maputo Corridor toll road con cessio)n and three concessions fir railroad lines seiving the MIapLIto port to consonria vith pritate atanicipation. In early 1999 Sotith Asia Gatess as Tcrminal tP&O Australia) took iVsel the Qcleen Elizabeth Quas of Colirtinbo Porn in Sri Lanka ucinder a tlirv-v'ear concession. 53 Transmission Investment in Competitive Power Systems Decentralizing decisions in Argentina Mlanuel Angel Abdala and Andres Chambouleyron Recent power outages in Argentina are largely the result of transmission problems that could be solved by more investment. Private concessionaires now operate the main and regional networks, but they are under no obligation to expand capacity. In a decentralized electricity market such as Argentina's the key to a successful transmission investment policy is coordination among the parties involved. Without coordination, an investment project in one site might affect or even disrupt power flow in another. But user coalitions are difficult to set up because of high transaction costs (mainly informational) and, in the Argentine system, because investment mechanisms do not provide a clear allocation of property rights to private investors. Investment decisionmaking for capacity expansion is centralized, but prolonged congestion indicates that the process is not working efficiently. Argentina is searching for a decentralized solution. This Note outlines the options for its high-voltage network and proposes a solution for the regional grids. The unbundling and privatization of Argentina's tial facility, and whoever controls it can exercise power sector in 1992 has been a success. Six a lot of market power. Reliability is key to the years after the reform wholesale prices had been operating efficiency of a transmission network.1 more than halved (from about US$50 per Regulation of transmission must induce optimal megawatt-hour) and output had increased by 52 management of existing assets and optimal percent. Retail prices have also fallen, and service investments in generation and transmission. In quality has improved. Transmission has shown countries that have established competition in explosive growth: medium- and high-voltage bulk and retail markets, transmission regulation lines increased 42 percent in length in 1991-97. policies are aimed at: - Guaranteeing open access to the network. But there is growing concern about the effi- * Ensuring fair and efficient pricing. ciency and fairness of transmission investment * Protecting ownership rights to transmission rules: in some regions lack of transmission assets (for both incumbents and new- investments has led to outages and thus to reli- comers). abilitv problems. More than 90 percent of power - Establishing network use protocols and coor- outages in the system have their origins in trans- dination and compensation mechanisms. mission problems that could be substantially avoided with increased investment. There are tensions between these objectives. No one should use a netwFork facility without con- The design of a regulatory framework for trans- tributing to its financing. Thus property rights are mission is challenging. Transmission is an essen- crucial to internalize network users' effects on 54 Transmission Investment in Competitive Power Systems each other and to avoid free- solution to the remaining chal- riding problems. A first prob- S lenge: devising an efficient lem here is to reconcile X decisionmaking mechanism existing ownership rights with for the regional meshed grids. the open access rule. Other challenges relate to the wayHo trnmsins transmission rights areLad-regulated in Argentina ministered: Should rights reflect today differences in nodal prices A (congestion pricing)? Should 7 In Argentina a private, non- they he issued in the form of . profit company, Compahia physical rights or as financial Administradora del Mercado rights? And should they be Mayorista Eldctrico SA dealt with through an e-xchange (CAMMNESA), is in charlge of market? Setting up transmtis- , generation dispatch, power sion rights may not even be flows, and administration of cost-effective if competition is.a wholesale transactions. The limited or if the rights are too main high-voltage national hard to administer. nenetwork is operated under concession by a reguIlated pri- Who owns the grid and issues vate monopoly, Transener SA, transmission rights also raises in an unbundledt electricity issues. Should investment be market where generation is carried out by grid users or very competitive. Six other grid operators, and what are private transmission compa- the implications of who pays nies hold concession rights to what to whom? In the United operate and maintain high- Kingdom Gridco, the grid voltage lines in regional areas, operator, has the monopoly on The regulation of transmission ownership and investment. In New Zealand net- is rooted in five principles: work users or coalitions of users make invest- - Monopoly rights to operate the existing net- ment decisions with minimal regulatory work. supervision. This is one of the alternatives under * A prohibition on selling or buying energy. study for Argentina, where new entrants can * Open access by buyers and sellers. construct, operate, and maintain new transmis- * Periodic competition for the concession sion facilities. rights.2 * Incentive-based regulation of pdices and quality. This Note looks at the issues in Argentina, where decisionmaking on transmission invest- Pricing ments is centralized and projects must be approved by a federal agency. Underlying Argentina has put in place a system of loca- Argentina's search for better rules for invest- tional electricity pricing. The price of power in ment is a belief that more decentralized mech- each network node consists of four main ele- anisms would lead to more efficient outcomes. mnents: marginal generation costs, resistive line The Note briefly describes current rules for losses, congestion costs (these are adminis- transmission investment, discusses the experi- tered costs; they are not calculated in real time ence so far, presents the alternative mecha- or even updated very often), and a reliability nisms under consideration, and proposes a component. The World Bank Group 55 Nodal prices vary with losses - Private contracts among in- and, above all, when trans- No one should terested parties. mission constraints occur. Build. operate. and maintain When the capacity of a line is use a network MOM) contracts. exceeded, the generation dis- patch is altered, local prices facilit1 The private contract mecha- change, and congestion charges J o nism is the most practical for thus appear as the differential in without lines that connect single users nodal price increases. These (or small coalitions of users) charges do not accrue to the contributina to a point on the grid. The grid companies, as they would 6 mechanism is straightforward: create a perverse incentive to tfo is interested parties finance the allow congestion. Instead, the its construction of the facility and charges are centrally admin- financing. operate it under the same price istered and collected by 6 and incentive regulations im- CAMMIESA for financing trans- Tbusproperty posed on Transener. mission investments. In aggre- gate, they bear no relationship rights are For large investments-such as to the costs of new investments one shared by several users- and are frequently lower, so that essential to BOM contracts are more appro- other sources of revenue are priate. They provide for a split- required to meet investment avoid savings device, maybe financed costs. partly by accumulated conges- free-riding tion charges, and go through a Transmission companies face four-step hearing and bidding no obligation to expand capac- problenis process. ity. Their pricing regime is a f hybrid, with elements of price - First, a group of parties (gen- caps, revenue caps, and incen- erators. distributors, or indus- tive clauses. Their main source of revenue is a trial users) interested in constructing a new line fixed annual charge paid by network users and files an application with ENRE outlining the set on the basis of energy losses (as forecast by details of a BOM contract, including a descrip- CANIMESA) and approvcd by thc fedcral regula- tion of thc projcct, the annual levy nceded to tory body, Ente Nacional Regulador de la finance the venture, and the amortization period. Electricidad (ENRE). This charge acts as a revenue cap for a five-year period.3 Other revenue comes Second, ENRE evaluates the proposal and veri- from connection charges (which are capped) and fies that tlhe net present value of tbe system's total bonuses for high reliability (administratively investment, operation, and maintenance costs is determined) less penalties for lack of availability, less with the project than without it. the main source of risk in transmission. Third, using a standard methodology, CAKMMESA Investment regulation identifies the beneficiaries of the project. The cri- terion is based on a physical concept: a network Capacity expansion in transmission requires user is considered a beneficiary if it is located on prior authorization by ENRE, which evaluates a node where electricity flows will change as a proposed projects on economic efficiency crite- result of the new project. Beneficiaries will be ria. Current law allows two ways of financing the liable for paying the levy that finances the pro- construction of new lines: ject, though they can contest this liability through 56 Transmission Investment in Competitive Power Systems a public hearing. A veto of the The rejection led to informal project muist have the support ~ .negyotiations among the of beneficiaries representing at Comahue generators, wlhich least 30 percent of the pool. eventually reformnulated th-e project and presented a new Fourth, if no veto stands, ENRE M initiative in September 1996. tenders the proposed BONI in In the second hcaring com- a pubhlic bid. awsarding the pro- plaints again arose about the ject to the bid with the lowest way CAMMESA allocated in- levy. If there are no competing vestment costs. but this time bids, the project goes to the the veto did not stand. The BOM contract proposed in the project was approved, and initial application, those that considlered their share of the costs unfair wvere The experience so far not comnpensated. Wh-iile private contracts hav e Lessons learned been widely used for relatively + small investments, BOM4 initia- Prolonged congestion in power tives have been limited to two transmission in Argentina indi- in five years. cates that the BOMNI and private contract procedures can leadt to The first initiative was proposed ~ .nonoptimal investment: in February 1995 to upgrade * The private contract proce- conductor size on a line be- dure grants no property rights, tween the Comahue and and the resulting threat of free Buenos Aires regions. It was riding deters investment-as expeditiously approved, but does the ineligibility for hind- only because the project was ing from congestion charges. entirely financed through the al- * The BOM procedure relies location of congestion charges. on an administrative rule for its most sensitive aspect, the The second initiative, also proposed in Fehruarv allocation of costs among potential beneficia- 1995, wxas to construct a 1,000-megawxatt line ries. That rule has conceptual flaws, and the berween Comahue and Buenos Aires veto safeguards are insufficient to prevent (Comahue's fourth hine) at a cost of about unfair and inefficient outcomes. US$200 million. The main beneficiaries were The BOM procedure partiallv avoids free rid- seven generators from the Comahue region suf- ing, since the allocation of costs mav vary fering from reduced generation load and low over time according to flows on the nes, line. local priccs as a result of transmission con- But it fails to eliminate free riding for the same straints. Accumulated congestion charges could reason: physical flows are an imperfect mea- finance only a small par-t of the investment. The sure of benefits because benefits bave price initiative was presented by five generators from and quality dimensions. Comahuc but vetoed by beneficiaries that dis- Congestion charges are handled through agreed with the allocation of costs. These repre- administrative rules, not market decisions. The sented nore than 30 percent of the pool, thanks current rules are clear and simple, allowing lit- to the two Comahue generators that did not join tle room for discretion. But congestion rents the initiative, so the veto stood. are collected by regions (or electric corridors), The World Bank Group 57 and it is unclear how the - in a radial network, where centrally administered funds No matter flows typically go in one direc- would be allocated if more tion and the capacity utiliza- than one project hecomes how hard a tion of any user is easv to eligible for accumulated measure. In a meshed net- congestion rents. The alloca- centralized work-, where it is sometimes tion could be inconsistent difficult to determine exactly wTith private investment agency tries the capacity used, users have incentives. 6 little incentive to buy the so- it will not cially optimal amount of TCRs Alternatives under in the auction. study bavre thse Transmission rights Policymakers in Argentina are same considering three alternative In the TR approach rights investment mechanisms, all of information would be allocated on the basis which involve granting some of bilateraL power flows in form of financial (not physical) as individual transmission lines; thus this ownership rights: transmission approach is based on actual capacity rights (TCRs) based on users do power flows, while the TCR incremental capacity, transmis- approach relies on actual use sion rights (TRs) based on bilat- about of the incremental capacity of eral power flows (Bastos 1998), the transmission facility. Under and transmission congestion exhected both approaches the loop contracts (TCCs) based on . flows could prevent holders of postinvestment congestion investment rights from exercising them . charges (Anderson and others That would affect the price of 1998). returns. each right and thus the likeli- hood that the investment pro- Transmission capacity rights - ject would be carried out. Under the TCR mechanism the potential benefi- Transmissicn congestion contracts ciaries of a capacity expansion project would buy financial instruments (TCRs) in a public auc- A TCC from node A to node B would give a user tion by submitting bids offering a price per kilo- the right to collect the congestion charges asso- watt of the incremental capacity. These ciated with the transmission of an energy flow instruments would confer a form of ownership from A to B. Those that congest the line with- rights on their buyers that could be exercised out having paid for it would generate conges- directly or leased to another potential user of the tion rents that would accrue to TCC owners, incremental capacity. thus sending the right economic signals to investors. The appeal of this mechanism is that the bene- ficiaries that finance the expansion would reveal This mechaniism shares a problem with the TCR their true preferences in the auction. In adclition, approaclh-determining the nominal capacity of the mechanism would eliminate free riding, the newly bhilt transmission line. This is a tricky since every user of the new facility would be business because in a meshed network nominal required to hold TCRs equal to the power capac- capacity depends on loop flows. the hour of the itv it demanded. But this feature is effective only day, and other factors. If the authority is unsure 58 Transmission Investment in Competitive Power Systems about the line's nominal capacitv, how many same information as individual users do about TCCs should it issue? their expected investment returns (with all fore- seeable events internalized). A second explana- The most important problem with TCCs is that tion is that the approach would alleviate the for some tvpes of transmission constraints, the free-riding problem. for two reasons: First, users allocation of congestion rents among flow paths internalize externalities when they voluntarily can be cumbersome. Since the amount of con- agree to undertake a project or when they bid gestion rents collected through TCCs would the price they would pay for a project. Second, depend on the spot price of electricity, market the board would have the power to provide for shocks affecting this price would put at risk the compensation among users whenever a new ability of TCCs to recover capital costs. For exam- project reduces the expected returns of an exist- ple, a fall in the cost of generation would cause ing one approved by the board. the spot price to fall and entitle TCC holders to smaller-than-expected congestion rents. There are also institutional advantages in the regional boards. By delegating some regulatory A local coalition approach power to network users, the committee approach for regional grids would lessen the risks of administrative expro- priation and opportunistic behavior by govern- Any of the three mechanisms could work well in ment. Conflict resolution arrangements would the very high-voltage network of Argentina probably be determined by the users themselves because the network is radial. But implementing (with the regulator intervening only as a last transmission rights would be difficult in regional resort). These elements would reduce the trans- grids, which are voltage meshed. An alternative action costs of new transmission investments. approach relies on a regional board to coordinate investment and allocate its costs on the basis of Conclusion self-imposed rules. Coalitions of future users reveal their preferences through a cost-benefit Alternative procedures for transmission invest- matio, which is used to rank and approve projects. ments are under study not only in Argentina but The projects would be financed through an also in other countries that have deregulated escrow7T fund created by regional netxvork users. their power sectors, including Australia The legal statLs of such projects would be the (Victoria), Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Peru, New same as that of current private contracts, except Zealand, and the United States. One way of for the role of the board and its eligibility for the establishing property rights is to issue financial proceeds of congestion charges to help finance transmission rights over new lines. Transmission projects. rights as described here can be made compati- ble with open access and efficient dispatch, but While this committee approach does not guar- there are still shortcomings in their capacity to antee optimal investment decisions, it offers prevent free riding in meshed networks or several advantages over existing Argentine reg- where competition in the product market is lim- ulation. It might lead to a better allocation of ited. Their complexity is also a liability, though investment costs because it gives users incen- not an insurmountable one. tives to reveal their preferences and no central- ized agency wxould meddle in their decisions. The regional board mechanism offers a different Why could this approach better handle the cost direction for policymaking, creating a forum for allocation in meshed networks? One explanation agents to discuss potential projects. There is no relates to the asymrnetries of information be- hard evidence that this mechanism would lead to tw,een users and CANIMESA. No matter how hard optimal investment decisions. But it offers a solu- this centralized agency tries, it will not have the tion to the investment cost allocation problem The World Bank Group 59 under existing rcgulation in Argentina-it would generate incentives for agents to join together in a group that promotes coordinated decisions, and thus alleviate free riding. The mechanism has two clear advantages: it is highly decentralized, min- imizing the scope for regulatorv discretion, and it is simple, requiring no ex post calculations of power flows or nominal capacity. COther needs in transnission include minimizing distances betsveen generation and clemand sites, controlling load pattern>, suppht ing emergenicy and security responses. coordtnating main- tenance, and managing operating reserves All these should he seen as services provided bh the transmission company The main difficaulty. fur hoth the firrn and the regilatoru lies in pricing these services, as oosting them out is ardcuous a Concesstons last ninety-five vears, but after the first period, which lasts fihfteen years. the government calls a public tender for the sale of the controlling share package at the end of each ten-year period. The incumbent has a slight advantage in this tender, since all ciompeting hids are compared wsith the sncumbent's statement of cumpany value (submitted in a sealed envelope before the bidding). If no cffer exceeds the incumbent's reference valtie, the concession rights do not change hands. But if offers do exceed that threshold. the group offering the highest bid acquires the rights by paying the incrimbent the hid price. The periodic com- petition gives the incumbent the incentive to preserve the value of the assets under concession, dampening the traditional nega tive effect of franchising contracts with asset reversion clauses I Structural changes in nodal prices are reflected in the revenue can every five years. in the taniff ret- ie. References Anderson, K.. S. liLnt, H. Parmesano, G Shuttlewvnrth, and S Powell 1998. "Analysis of the Reform of the Argentine Power Sector Final Report." Final epoltito the Aigentine Secretary of Eneigy National Ecoinomic Research Associates. Bastos, C.M. 1998. "Clavde dc la Transmisimn." Paper presented at the Expectativa ser-itiar Transtoist6n y M'ercado Electnrco Como Armornzar Regulacion r Competencia, Cordoba, April. Chao. H.P.. and S C. Peck. 1996. "A MNfarket Mechanism for Electric Power Transmissirin." Jouernal ofRegcaotor 01cuu0o77tics 101f ). Oren, S 1997 "Passive Transmission Rights Will Not Do the Joh E/ecatrcirtvoriul (June . ManuelAngelAbdala (M1anuel Abdala@ legc.com), Lau and Econzomzics Consulting Group, and A7zdres Cbamboulevron, Instituto de Estuidios sobre la Realidad Argentina y Latinoamericana Private sector For a free subscription please fill out this card Return to Suizanine Smnitht. Managing Editor. Poblic Policv tor the Private Sector, Roomn FIIK-208. The World Bank, 1818 H- Street, NW ashington, D.C. 20433 (fax: 202 522 2961~ enmail: Asjith74)worldhank.org~) Plea~se sclect tnpIcs (f- tntcrc2~t: I utility regulation F RST NAME, LAST NAME 2 utility privatizaition 21 energy mnarkets JOB TITLE I water mark-ets 2j transport privatization COMPANY 2information infrastructure 2 prolect fErtance STREET ADDRESS 2 municipal finiance I capital market developmnent CIT STATE I hank restructuring 2 sovereign risk management POSTAL CODE CO. 'TRY 2 hrts~ness law 2 other EMAIL WOIRK PHONE WORK FAX Fil I& Yiw Qo )fVdoW tie Back Reb&d Homne Se&ch GuWe Puint Securety S oakntaiks _&j Locati(X tA- lp r/sI'tw [sdbanrk,otg/htrnl/lpd!nakes/1 75/1175baccortpdl 7 i4eme L0*W _j ew&Cool ir~~f Ak Scor-eclard fo)r Energy Relorm hi Developing Countries Most Notes are now available on-line in full-text HTML format or in downloadable Adobe PDF format (http://www.worlldbank.org/html/fpdlnotesl).