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CSME

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Title: CSME


1
CSME The Platform for Growth and Expansion of
the Regional Financial Services Industry
  • Presentation to CAIB 2007 Conference, Guyana
  • November 2007
  • By
  • Claremont Kirton

2
(No Transcript)
3
CSME an overview
  • A single market and single economy
  • Single market almost completed
  • Single economy currently being implemented

4
CSME Mission statement
  •  
  •  
  • We envision a Caribbean Community
  • in which every citizen has the opportunity to
    realise his or her human potential and is
    guaranteed the full enjoyment of their human
    rights in every sphere
  • in which social and economic justice is
    enshrined in law and embedded in practice
  • a Community from which poverty, unemployment and
    social exclusion have been banished
  • in which all citizens willingly accept a
    responsibility to contribute to the welfare of
    their fellow citizens and to the common good
  • and one which serves as a vehicle for the
    exercise of the collective strength of the
    Caribbean region, and the affirmation of the
    collective identity of the Caribbean people, in
    the world community.

5
CSME Development Vision
  • ECONOMIC 
  • Self-sustaining economic growth based on strong
    international competitiveness, innovation,
    productivity, and flexibility of resource use
  • A full-employment economy that provides a decent
    standard of living and quality of life for all
    citizens elimination of poverty and provision
    of adequate opportunities for young people,
    constituting an alternative to emigration
  • Spatially equitable economic growth within the
    Community, having regard to the high growth
    potential of member states with relatively low
    per capita incomes and large resources of
    under-utilised land and labour
  • NON-ECONOMIC
  • Social equity, social justice, social cohesion
    and personal security
  • Environmental protection and ecological
    sustainability
  • Democratic, transparent and participatory
    governance.

6
Development vision economic dimension
  • Accelerated economic growth via adjustment and
    transformation of regional economies, improved
    international competitiveness, sustained
    innovation and productivity growth.
  • Economies with lower per capita incomes to grow
    at fastest rates, so as to induce some
    convergence.
  • Policy implementation involves partnership
    between government, private sector , labour and
    civil society.
  • Private sector lead role in investment as well
    as ownership/management of economic activities.

7
CSME main economic drivers
  • Energy
  • Agriculture
  • Sustainable Tourism and Agro-tourism
  • Manufacturing
  • New export services

8
CSME enabling policies
  • Common sectoral policies will be complemented by
    common regimes or harmonised policies in
  • Human resource utilisation
  • Fiscal, monetary and incentives policies
  • Transport
  • Investment
  • Financial services
  • Capital market integration
  • Competition
  • Regional quality infrastructure
  • Small and medium enterprises
  • Corporate governance

9
CSME enabling policies
  • These will require
  • Institutional arrangements, including human
    resources to support policy implementation
  • A Regional Development Strategy and related Plan
    which will include quantitative targets and
    indicators

10
MACRO-ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT CSME
  • Region divided into
  • i) OECS countries very small, open, dependent
    on tourism, agriculture, remittances and foreign
    assistance. Monetary union, Central Bank -- ECCB.
  • ii) Bahamas, Belize, Barbados fixed exchange
    rate, own Central Bank.
  • iii) Guyana, Haiti, Suriname, Jamaica, Trinidad
    Tobago own Central Banks flexible, floating
    exchange rates attempts at economic
    stabilization.

11
FINANCIAL SECTOR OVERVIE W
  • Financial depth (credit or money/GDP) greater
    than average L AC.
  • Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad have fairly active
    stock exchanges.
  • Commercial banks dominate financial sector
    dominance even greater than explicit share
    indicates as many near banks are subsidiaries
    of commercial banks.
  • Share of commercial bank assets in total
    financial sector assets declining. Increasing
    role for NBFI s.

12
CARICOM Financial Services Agreement (CFSA)
  • CFSA will establish the legal framework for the
    unrestricted movement of capital and financial
    resources across the regional economic space.
  • Revised Treaty sets the broad policy framework.
  • CFSA expands Treaty provisions.

13
Financial services integration direct benefits I
  • Regional pooling of liquidity and regionalization
    of supply and demand for financial instruments
  • Finance domestic investments over and beyond
    domestic savings
  • Improved operation of financial markets in
    fairness, efficiency, transparency and degree of
    competition
  • Product innovation, wider range of financial
    products and improvements in service quality.

14
Financial services integration direct benefits
II
  • Lower transactions costs for financial service
    firms and their customers
  • Lower liquidity risk for financial service firms
  • Tendency towards the convergence of interest
    rates
  • Larger and more efficient financial institutions
  • Increased investment, production and employment.
  •  

15
Financial services integration indirect
benefits
  • Stimulate domestic financial development
  • Impose discipline on domestic macroeconomic
    policies
  • Improve operations of domestic institutions,
    based on implementation of best practices.

16
Capital market integration
  • Cross listing of regional firms only 13 out of
    132 firms trading in CARICOM countries are cross
    listed
  • Financial sector leading in terms of sectoral
    distribution
  • Regional bond market TT centred

17
Capital market integration Key issues
  • Removal of multiple listing fees and other
    constraints to cross listing
  • Harmonization of securities/company laws
  • Harmonization of listing rules, trading
    requirements and procedures
  • Updating trading technology establishing
    regional electronic business policy
  • Incentives for firms to become publicly listed.
  • Regional stock exchange

18
Monetary integration
  • Plans for Monetary Union
  • CMU to serve as catalyst for monetary integration
  • Full implementation of Rights of Establishment
  • Harmonization of legal, regulatory and policy
    environment
  • CARICOM Investment Code and CFSA

19
CSME roadmap for financial services integration I
  • Phase I 2006-2008
  • Political approval of Development Vision and
    Regional Development Strategy
  • Full implementation of free movement of service
    providers
  • Political approval of CFSA and Caricom Investment
    Regime
  • Establishment of the Regional Stock Exchange
  • Harmonization of financial regulatory environment

20
CSME roadmap for financial services integration
I Monetary issues
  • Phase I 2006-2008
  • (i) Adoption of a Protocol on Monetary
    Integration to the Revised Treaty setting out the
    framework for the completion of the CMU
  • (ii) Agreement on the adoption of a numeraire
    CARICOM Currency Unit as a further step towards
    full Monetary Union and
  • (iii) Initiation of the Caribbean Monetary
    Union with Category 1 countries as the
    corei.e. Member States that already satisfy the
    convergence criteria for the CMU

21
CSME roadmap for financial services integration II
  • Phase 2 2009 - 2015
  • Expansion of the CMU to encompass Category 2 and
    Category 3 countries.
  • Issues to be addressed by the Protocol are
  • (i) the nature and scope of a common monetary
    policy
  • (ii) the relationship between national central
    banks and a regional monetary authority,
  • (iii) legislative arrangements required to give
    effect to monetary integration, and
  • (iv) the operational requirements of monetary
    integration.

22
Brewster Multivariate Prioritization Analysis I
  • Examined CSME policies using multivariate
    analysis
  • Variables used
  • urgency
  • short-term economic impact
  • long term economic impact
  • logical dependence (building blocks)
  • opportunity cost
  • probability of attaining objective (risk)

23
Brewster Multivariate Prioritization Analysis II
  • 18 out of 30 policy areas fall into high risk
    low probability of attainment in the foreseeable
    future.
  • All macroeconomic policy areas fall into this
    category macroeconomic policy coordination
    Monetary Integration/Union Community Investment
    Policy Fiscal Policy Harmonization.
  • Low risk areas high probability of attainment
    in the foreseeable future include trade in
    goods, trade in services free circulation.

24
Brewster Multivariate Prioritization Analysis III
  • Medium category
  • banking and securities legislation
  • regional development fund
  • regional agricultural policy
  • government procurement
  • transportation
  • other services

25
European Union financial integration its
experience
  • Some studies have attributed as much as 25 of EU
    GDP from single market to liberalization of
    financial services across borders.
  • Gains include reduced intermediation margins,
    lowering cost of capital to investors
  • procurement of services from other member states
  • lower regulatory costs
  • impetus for financial innovation.

26
European Union financial integration its
experience
  • Pre euro, significant intra-euro trade.
  • With euro, significant increases in intra-euro
    and extra euro area trade promotion of cross
    border trade.
  • Increases in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and
    mergers and acquisitions.
  • Euro is a catalyst for developing the single
    market in financial services.
  • Euro area corporations maximising possibilities
    of appealing to broader group of investors to
    raise funds

27
European Union financial integration its
experience
  • Between 1997 and 2005, euro area residents
    doubled their holdings of equity issued in
    another euro area country.
  • Share of long term debt securities issued in euro
    area and held by other euro area residents has
    increased over the last decade.
  • Note, however, that integration in retail banking
    has not increased by much cross border banking
    activity limited.

28
European Union financial integration its
applicability
  • Careful about using EU experience as blueprint
    for financial integration motivation different
    objective preconditions different also.
  • Pre euro, significant intra EU trade high levels
    of institutional development very complementary
    production structures driven mainly by political
    versus economic motives.

29
European Union financial integration its
applicability
  • Caribbean trade mainly extra regional rather than
    intra-regional.
  • Invisible extra-regional exports via tourism and
    services key
  • Initial drivers of Caribbean regional integration
    were economic not political.
  • Role of remittances via transfers from Diaspora
  • Role of marine borders unlike EU mainly land
    borders

30
Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS)
  • Common currency
  • Central bank and stock exchange
  • Common court
  • Joint diplomatic representation
  • Directorate of civil aviation
  • Joint regulation of telecommunications
  • Joint pharmaceutical procurement system

31
Eastern Caribbean Central Bank
  • Establishing markets and institutions
  • Implementing regulatory framework
  • Removing legal and administrative barriers to
    creating single financial space.
  • Currently, there exists
  • Common market for EC dollar and foreign
    currencies
  • Interbank market to provide liquidity for
    banks

32
ECCB
  • A regional government securities market (Regional
    Government Securities market)
  • A securities market for shares
  • A secondary market for primary mortgages
  • Institutions include Eastern Caribbean
    Securities Exchange, EC Central Securities
    Depository and EC Central Securities Registry
  • Eastern Caribbean Home Mortgage Bank
  • EC Institute of Banking and Financial Services

33
Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU)
  • Three key institutional arrangements for
    financing development
  • commercial banking sector
  • development finance institutions
  • capital markets.
  • EC Enterprise Fund and EC Unit Trust
  • Integrated regulatory framework

34
  • THANKS
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