Financial Sector Development in the Middle East and North Africa

Based on data collected on a wide range of financial sector indicators, new indices of financial development for countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are constructed, encompassing six themes: development of the monetary sector and monetary policy, banking sector development, nonbank financial development, regulation and supervision, financial openness, and institutional quality. The paper finds that the degree of financial development varies across the region. Some countries have relatively well-developed banking sectors and regulatory and supervisory regimes. However, across the region, more needs to be done to reinforce the institutional environment and promote nonbank financial sector development. Based on a subset of indicators, the MENA region is found to compare favorably with a few other regions, but it ranks far behind the industrialized countries and East Asia.

Abstract

Based on data collected on a wide range of financial sector indicators, new indices of financial development for countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are constructed, encompassing six themes: development of the monetary sector and monetary policy, banking sector development, nonbank financial development, regulation and supervision, financial openness, and institutional quality. The paper finds that the degree of financial development varies across the region. Some countries have relatively well-developed banking sectors and regulatory and supervisory regimes. However, across the region, more needs to be done to reinforce the institutional environment and promote nonbank financial sector development. Based on a subset of indicators, the MENA region is found to compare favorably with a few other regions, but it ranks far behind the industrialized countries and East Asia.

I. Introduction

As countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) consider ways to promote rapid and lasting economic growth, further financial sector reform should be high on their agenda.2 The theory is that policies aimed at enhancing financial sector performance will result in lower information, transaction, and monitoring costs, thus improving allocative efficiency and raising output. Supporting evidence is typically based on a broad cross-section of countries, where financial development is measured by a small set of statistical indicators.3 However, comparatively little work has been done on: (i) the specifics of financial sector development in the MENA region, and (ii) measures of financial development in the MENA region that go beyond simple aggregate indicators.

Going beyond simple “standard” quantitative indicators such as M2/GDP is necessary to identify and prioritize among different areas of financial sector reform. The simple indicators, though easily available and amenable to cross-regional and intertemporal comparisons, do not necessarily capture what is broadly meant by financial sector development. Financial development is a multifaceted concept, encompassing not only monetary aggregates and interest rates (or rates of return) but also regulation and supervision, degree of competition, financial openness, institutional capacity such as the strength of property rights, and the variety of markets and financial products that constitute a nation’s financial structure.

In this study, we assess financial sector development in the MENA countries—by collecting data on a wide range of financial sector issues, including from new surveys of MENA country economists at the IMF in 2000/01 and 2002/03—and propose several policy measures to enhance this sector’s performance. Based on the data, we construct new indices of financial development for the MENA countries encompassing six themes: development of the monetary sector and monetary policy; banking sector development; nonbank financial sector development; regulation and supervision; financial openness; and institutional quality such as the strength of property rights. Using a subset of indicators for which data are readily available, we also analyze the MENA region’s performance over time relative to a few other regions.

We find that within the MENA region there is substantial variation in the degree of financial development; some countries are fairly well advanced, whereas a few others have significant room for improvement. As a group, MENA countries appear to perform relatively well on the regulation and supervision theme as well as on financial openness. However, they need to do significantly more to reinforce the institutional environment and promote nonbank financial sector development. Compared to most other developing country regions, the MENA region performs well, but it ranks far behind the industrialized countries and East Asia.

The rest of the paper is organized as follows. We briefly review the literature on financial development and growth and draw general lessons for macroeconomic and financial policy. Then, we describe the data collected, assess common trends, strengths, and weaknesses among MENA countries, and discuss areas for future reform. Finally, we construct several new measures of financial sector development for the MENA countries, and compare the region with other regions.

II. Literature Review

A. Financial Development and Growth

The theoretical argument for linking financial development to growth is that a well-developed financial system performs several critical functions to enhance the efficiency of intermediation by reducing information, transaction, and monitoring costs. A modern financial system promotes investment by identifying and funding good business opportunities, mobilizes savings, monitors the performance of managers, enables the trading, hedging, and diversification of risk, and facilitates the exchange of goods and services. These functions result in a more efficient allocation of resources, in a more rapid accumulation of physical and human capital, and in faster technological progress, which in turn feed economic growth.

What leads to a well-developed financial sector? Conversely, what hinders financial sector development? These questions are the subject of a large and still growing research literature from which some general conclusions can be drawn.4 In general, there is agreement that macroeconomic stability is critical for the growth of financial sector services. Countries should adopt appropriate macroeconomic policies, encourage competition within the financial sector, and develop a strong and transparent institutional and legal framework for financial sector activities. In particular, there is a need for prudential regulations and supervision, strong creditor rights, and contract enforcement.

Financial sector development is often hindered by government-imposed restrictions and price distortions on the financial sector, which are mainly applied so that the government can use the financial system as a source of public finance. In developing countries, examples of these policies include high inflation taxation, high required reserves ratios, subsidized or directed credit, collusive contracts between public enterprises and banks, credit rationing, and ceilings on deposit and loan interest rates (or rates of return). These conditions as a whole are collectively referred to as “financial repression” and a large body of research has shown that these financial repression policies undermine economic growth. Some studies have shown that a strong degree of financial repression results in lower per capita GDP growth of over 1 percentage point a year.5

Empirical research supports the thesis that financial sector development is positively related to levels of income and growth, but the issue of causality is not settled. Most studies find a positive correlation between levels of financial development and growth, controlling for several determinants of growth.6 But the precise magnitude of the relationship remains debated, and depends on the financial development indicators used, estimation method, data frequency, and functional specification.7, 8 In addition, the direction of causation is debated, as financial development can be thought of as following or accommodating growth instead of causing it. For example, improvements in communication technologies could enhance financial sector efficiency, or financial services may grow as incomes grow because people demand more financial services.

In many studies, financial development is a good leading indicator of growth; the initial level of financial development predicts subsequent rates of economic growth, physical capital accumulation, and productivity growth, even after controlling for income, education, political stability, and measures of monetary, trade, and fiscal policy.9 Yet, this does not mean that financial development causes growth since the financial sector could be growing in anticipation of real economic growth. There is suggestive time series evidence that causality runs from finance to growth. Some studies have found bi-directional causality and even reverse causality,10 but others have used longer time series of data, different sets of countries, and econometric methods and have found strong evidence for causality from financial development to growth.11

In summary, although research continues on the subject, the current state of knowledge suggests that a lagging financial sector can drag down or inhibit growth prospects and that a well-developed financial sector can facilitate growth. Government decision makers should therefore eliminate financial repression conditions as well as facilitate and support the process of financial development as important elements of their policy package to stimulate and sustain economic growth.

B. Measuring Financial Development

Understanding the impact of financial development on economic growth and assessing the development of the financial sector in the MENA region requires good measures of financial development. Empirical work is usually based on standard quantitative indicators for a broad cross-section of countries such as the ratios of liquid liabilities to GDP, deposit money bank assets to banking sector assets, and credit to the private sector to GDP. As noted above, long time series of these measures are available for a wide range of countries allowing us to compare and analyze development across countries and over time. However, these simple measures do not necessarily capture the different structural and institutional details of what is broadly meant by financial development. The financial structure of a country is composed of a variety of markets and financial products, and it is difficult to conceive of a few measures that could adequately capture all relevant aspects of development. In addition, the standard quantitative indicators may at times give a misleading picture of financial development. For instance, although a higher ratio of broad money (or M2) to GDP is generally associated with greater financial liquidity and depth, the ratio may decline rather than rise as a financial system develops because people have more alternatives to invest in longer-term or less-liquid financial instruments.

Going beyond the standard quantitative indicators, Gelbard and Leite (1999) used measures of market structure, financial products, financial liberalization, institutional environment, financial openness, and monetary policy instruments to construct a comprehensive index for 38 sub-Saharan African countries, for 1987 and 1997. Similarly, Abiad and Mody (2003) created an index for a 24-year period from 1973 to 1996 for 35 countries. They examined six measures of policy liberalization in the areas of credit controls, interest rate controls, entry barriers, regulations and securities markets, financial sector privatization, and restrictions on international financial transactions. These more-detailed measures provide a richer description of financial development and motivate our measures of financial development in the MENA region.

C. Studies on Financial Development in MENA

There has been little work on measuring and assessing financial sector development in the MENA region, mainly because of the paucity of data. Our analysis builds on three studies that have examined financial development in MENA and broadly mirrors their conclusions. Chalk, Jbili, Treichel, and Wilson (1996) found that the 13 MENA countries included in their analysis have made significant progress in financial deepening. But in most of these countries, financial markets are thin and tightly regulated, government ownership is prevalent, and market forces play a limited role. Nashashibi, Elhage, and Fedelino (2001) also found that most Arab countries had made progress over the past decade in financial reform but were still at an early stage in the process. Their financial systems are dominated by banks and, in some, by public banks; and capital market development is hindered by legal, institutional, financial, and economic factors. In comparison, Jbili, Galbis, and Bisat (1997) concluded that the financial sectors in the Arab states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)12 are developed, technologically advanced, and more integrated into the world economy than in the rest of the MENA region. This finding reflects the substantial differentiation in the degree of financial development in the region.

III. Financial Development in the MENA Region

A. Gathering Data

Against this background, we surveyed the country economists for 20 MENA countries13 at the IMF—in 2000/01 and 2002/03—to collect information on the nature of financial products and institutions in these countries. We organized the data according to six themes, each of which reflects a different facet of financial development: (1) development of the monetary sector and monetary policy; (2) banking sector development; (3) development of the nonbank financial sector; (4) banking regulation and supervision; (5) financial openness; and (6) institutional quality.14 We also collected several macroeconomic and financial time-series data from the International Financial Statistics (IFS), World Economic Outlook (WEO), and World Development Indicators (WDI), as well as measures of institutional development from the International Country Risk Guide (ICRG) and the Heritage Foundation (HF).15 We then developed index values to measure each country’s progress in each of the areas.

B. Rationale Behind the Organization of the Data

Controls on deposit and/or lending rates and on the allocation of credit are common modes of repression in underdeveloped financial systems. Forcing banks to subsidize credit to certain sectors, or restricting the quantity of credit, distorts the credit market and lowers efficiency. Such controls not only prevent banks and other financial intermediaries from adequately funding promising and productive business opportunities but often also lower savings and encourage capital flight. The monetary sector development and monetary policy theme, therefore, examines the extent to which the government uses indirect monetary policy instruments as opposed to direct controls on interest rates (or rates of return) and credit allocation. It also considers the efficiency of markets for government securities and the provision of liquidity services by the financial system.

Banks are central to the financial and payments system of most economies, often playing a critical role in the process of mobilizing savings, funding investment opportunities, monitoring managers, and diversifying risk. Consequently, the banking sector development theme examines the size, structure, and efficiency of the banking sector. Among other things, it investigates the profitability of banks, bank competition and concentration, payments systems, ease of private sector access to bank credit, and frequency of noncash transactions. Drawing on recent empirical research, the presumption is that banks operating in competitive environments, including with less government intervention, low market concentration, and foreign bank entry, are likely to be more efficient and conducive to growth. The financial repression literature has convincingly shown that government restrictions on the banking system, such as high reserve requirements, interest rate ceilings, and directed credit repress development. In addition, recent work has shown that concentrated banking systems and larger government ownership of banks have a depressing impact on overall growth, while restrictions on foreign bank entry hinder allocative efficiency.16

The nonbank financial sector development theme explores the development of alternative sources of capital as well as markets for financial products and services. These include stock markets, mortgage or housing finance institutions, corporate bond markets, insurance companies, mutual funds, and pension funds. They reflect the variety of products and markets that allow a financial system to fulfill its functions, namely, enabling firms and households to raise finance in cost-effective ways, mobilizing finance, monitoring managers, and diversifying risk. Research on stock markets has shown that highly liquid stock markets are an important complement to banking sector development in promoting growth.17 Liquidity or the ease of transacting, as opposed to the size of stock markets, is important because it facilitates the exchange of information and assets, thus improving resource allocation and growth. As Levine (2002) notes, “simply listing on the national stock exchange does not necessarily foster resource allocation.” Therefore, in addition to the existence of nonbank financial intermediaries and markets, we pay particular attention to liquidity.

Owing to informational asymmetries and associated market failures inherent in financial sector transactions, appropriate regulation and supervision are important aspects of financial development. Regulatory authorities need to ensure that depositors’ interests are protected and fraud is curtailed, which in turn boost confidence in the financial sector and facilitate intermediation. The regulation and supervision theme assesses banks’ performance with respect to minimum (Basel) capital adequacy requirements. Among other items, it evaluates the prudential monitoring of banks and the transparency and openness of the regulatory environment.

Another aspect of development is the degree to which the domestic financial system is able to intermediate funds across borders. This affects the extent to which the country gains from international trade. The financial openness theme assesses the appropriateness of the exchange regime and examines whether there are significant restrictions on the trading of financial assets or currency by foreigners and residents. Restrictions on current account transactions could substantially hinder trade in goods and services. Similarly, multiple exchange practices and misaligned exchange rates could hinder trade and resource allocation. Restrictions on capital account transactions, however, might be needed unless appropriate institutional arrangements, including prudential regulations and supervision are in place. As is being debated in the context of currency and financial crises and the optimal order of liberalization, an open capital account without appropriate oversight and information disclosure could increase the risk of financial collapse. With appropriate institutions, an open economy benefits from the worldwide pool of funds to finance promising domestic investment projects and the allocation of local savings to promising investment alternatives globally.

Finally, the legal and political environment within which the financial system operates is an important determinant of the range and quality of services offered by financial institutions. For instance, in many developing countries, banks are reluctant to extend loans because an inefficient judicial system or a corrupt bureaucracy or political institutions hinder loan recovery. The institutional environment theme tries to judge the quality of institutions such as law and order, property rights, bureaucratic quality, accountability of the government, and the ease of loan recovery through the judicial system that influence the performance of the financial system. Several empirical studies have established the impact of institutions on growth.18

C. Analysis

Having collected and organized the data according to the above themes, an analysis suggests common strengths, trends, and weaknesses, and points to future areas for reform. MENA countries in general perform reasonably well in regulation and supervision. But they need to do more to strengthen the institutional environment and promote nonbank financial sector development. Within the region, progress on financial sector reforms has been uneven. Some countries have well-developed financial sectors, particularly banking sectors, such as the GCC countries, Lebanon, and Jordan. Others, such as Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia, have made important advances in recent years. Overall, however, more remains to be done.

The main findings for the MENA region, according to the six themes, are summarized below.

Monetary policy. For the most part, interest rates (or rates of return) are freely determined, indirect monetary policy tools are employed, and government securities exist. However, in some cases, despite de jure liberalization of interest rates (or rates of return) and removal of credit ceilings, continuing public sector involvement in practice prevents complete market determination of rates and allocation of credit.

In nearly all cases, government securities (whether treasury bills or central bank paper) exist to some degree. In the majority of countries, some open market operations take place. However, in most countries, the incomplete development or nonexistence of secondary markets for government securities hinders the broader use of open market operations by central banks. In addition, a few countries do not follow a comprehensive framework for designing and conducting monetary policy.

Banking sector. In the GCC countries, Jordan, and Lebanon, the banking sector is well developed, profitable, and efficient. However, in about half the region, this is not the case. In seven of the 20 countries, the banking sector is dominated by public sector banks, and in another eight, the government holds significant stakes in financial institutions. These countries are generally characterized by government intervention in credit allocation, losses and liquidity problems, and wide interest rate margins (or spreads in rates of returns). In many parts of the region, there is an urgent need for developing modern banking and financial skills. In seven of the countries, noncash transactions such as credit card use or ATM access were limited or nonexistent.

The banking sector is highly concentrated in eight countries. For example, assets of the three largest banks in these countries exceed 70 percent of total bank assets; the same holds true for loans and deposits. In another seven countries, there is moderate concentration with, for example, four banks accounting for over 60 percent of total bank assets, loans, and deposits. In half the countries, the entry of new banks is difficult.

Generally, there is some correlation among the different attributes of the banking sector. For instance, countries with a highly concentrated banking sector are, in addition, generally also dominated by public sector banks and have limited noncash transactions.

Nonbank financial sector. In most of the region, the nonbank financial sector—comprising the stock market, corporate bond market, insurance companies, pension funds, and mutual funds—needs further development. Where such markets exist, trading is usually quite limited. For instance, stock markets in the region tend to be characterized by high concentration, relatively few listings resulting in low levels of liquidity, and no separate regulatory authority. Moreover, state ownership of utilities and other enterprises in some countries deprives the market of an important source of new issues. The development of these markets is complicated by legal limitations on ownership, the need for a clear and stable legislative framework, weak investor confidence, and inactive or nonexistent secondary markets for financial instruments.

Housing finance institutions have been developed in most MENA countries, primarily through state-owned specialized housing banks. These institutions tend to subsidize credit to low- and middle-income households. However, these quasi-fiscal operations are often not reflected transparently in government budgets. Banks are involved in mortgage finance in countries where specialized mortgage institutions are not present.

Regulation and supervision. Many MENA countries, such as the GCC countries, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia, have strengthened banking supervision and regulation, established up-to-date procedures to collect prudential information, and regularly inspect and audit banks. They have taken steps to conform to international Basel standards by increasing capital adequacy ratios and reducing nonperforming loans. However, success in the latter has been limited, and for most countries nonperforming loans remain in the range of 10 percent to 20 percent of total loans.

The independence of the regulatory and supervisory authority, usually the central bank, could be enhanced and supervisors’ skills could be improved. In six of the countries surveyed, the central bank was not considered to be independent, and an additional six had only limited independence. Moreover, the degree of transparency could be improved. About half of the monetary authorities in surveyed countries had created websites to disseminate timely macroeconomic data and relevant financial sector laws and decrees, although coverage could be increased. Reflecting limited overall transparency, only half of the countries posted country staff reports on the IMF web site.

Financial openness. MENA countries have gradually opened up their current as well as capital accounts. However, nearly half the countries continue to maintain restrictions on repatriation of earnings as well as on the domestic purchase of foreign currency.

Most of the countries in the region maintain some form of a pegged exchange rate arrangement, with over half of the countries surveyed pegging to the U.S. dollar. Half of the countries either have or can access easily a forward exchange market.

Three of the 20 countries continued to maintain parallel exchange markets and/or multiple currency rates. At the same time, these three countries, and two others, continued to maintain restrictions on current international transactions, and had not accepted the obligations of Article VIII (Sections 2, 3, and 4) of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement.

Institutional environment. In much of the MENA region, the quality of institutions, including the judicial system, bureaucracy, and property rights, is poor. This hinders banking and commercial activity as well as investment, and hence growth.

In several countries, the judicial system is susceptible to political pressure and long delays, resulting in poor legal enforcement of contracts and loan recovery. Of the 20 countries surveyed, in only two was it considered easy to recover loans through the judicial system. The International Country Risk Guide assigns a low rank to countries in the region for the quality of the bureaucracy, at a level significantly below that of more industrialized countries, including the fast-growing newly industrialized Asian economies.

Property rights enforcement tends to be weak in the region. On the Heritage Foundation’s index of private property protection, only one country in the region (Bahrain) has a rating of very high protection, and two (the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait) have a rating of high protection. Similar to the results presented above, the Heritage Foundation notes significant government involvement in banking and finance in the region. Its index (which weighs government ownership, restrictions, influence over credit allocation, regulations and freedom to offer services in the financial sector) rates only one country (Bahrain) as having very low government restrictiveness in the financial sector for 2002, and two (Jordan and Lebanon) as having low government restrictiveness.

IV. New Measures of Financial Development for the MENA Region

A. Comprehensive Index of Financial Development

Based on the above-mentioned themes, we developed six different indices, which we then combined to construct a comprehensive index. Each of these six subindices was a composite of between four and eight different indicators that allowed us to measure the various subfacets of each area.19 The comprehensive index therefore was a combination of 35 different indicators and served as a composite measure of financial development. We then grouped countries according to this composite index under five categories of very high, high, medium, low, and very low financial development.

To compute the comprehensive index, we assigned a set of weights to each of the 35 indicators. But to ensure robustness, we calculated it using different sets of weights.20 We found that the grouping of countries into the five financial development categories was robust to the different weighting schemes, although the relative ranking of countries within each grouping changed slightly. We also found that, reflecting continuing reform efforts in the region, Tunisia, Pakistan, and Morocco moved into a higher level between 2000/01 and 2002/03. Within groups, the relative ranking of some countries changed; for example, the increase in Sudan’s ranking reflected reforms carried out during that time across most of the six categories (Tables 1 and 2).

Table 1.

MENA Countries: Comprehensive Financial Development Index 1/

(Based on Qualitative and Quantitative Data, Scale: 0-10) 2/

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Source: Authors’ calculations.

Original “subjective” weighted index.

Scale: Very low=below 2.5, Low=2.5-5.0, Medium=5.0-6.0, High=6.0-7.5, Very high=above 7.5.

Table 2.

MENA Countries: Financial Development Index, 2002/03 1/

(Based on Qualitative and Quantitative Data, Scale: 0-10) 2/

article image
Source: Authors’ calculations.

Original “subjective” weighted index.

Scale: Very low=below 2.5, Low=2.5-5.0, Medium=5.0-6.0, High=6.0-7.5, Very high=above 7.5.

On average, countries at higher levels of financial development outperformed countries at lower levels in each of the six aspects of financial development. The countries scored relatively well on regulation and supervision and on financial openness, but fared poorly on the development of a strong institutional environment and the nonbank financial sector (Figure 1).21

Figure 1.
Figure 1.

MENA Countries: Comprehensive Index of Financial Development---Comparing Very High, High, Medium, Low, and Very Low Development Countries, 2002/03 (Scale 0-10)

Citation: IMF Working Papers 2004, 201; 10.5089/9781451874389.001.A001

Source: Authors’ calculations.

In comparison to other countries in the region, MENA countries with higher levels of financial development tended to have (1) a greater use of indirect monetary policy instruments; (2) a smaller degree of public ownership of financial institutions; (3) smaller or no monetary financing of the fiscal deficit; (4) stronger prudential regulation and supervision; (5) higher-quality human resources, including management and financial skills; and (6) a stronger legal environment.

B. Principal Components Analysis of the Qualitative Data

While our primary approach is to rely on our qualitative judgment to identify and then assign relative weights to different components of financial development, we also use principal components analysis (PCA) to generate an alternative set of weights. Roughly speaking, PCA examines the statistical correlations across the different variables, and assigns the largest weights to those indicators of financial development most correlated with the other indicators in the dataset. Intuitively, this method tries to uncover the common statistical characteristics across the various indicators in order to combine them into a composite index of financial development. Since each one of our indicators is meant to capture some aspect of the concept we term “financial development,” the variable most correlated with the others is judged to be the most accurate indicator of financial development.

The PCA-generated weights serve as a check for the sensitivity of our results. We recreate each of the six subindices using PCA. The index values generated for the 40 data points (20 countries, 2 time periods) are highly correlated with the original index values based on our subjective judgment. The correlation ranges from 0.915 for the openness index to 0.988 for the institutional quality index, and the average correlation coefficient across the six subindices is over 0.97. As a result, generating weights using PCA instead would not change our conclusions significantly.

PCA also helps identify a subset of variables which, according to the correlations in the data, are the most crucial indicators of financial development. Table 3 lists 18 variables (out of 35) that were assigned a weight of 3 percent or greater by PCA. These 18 variables jointly account for approximately 80 percent of the total weight. The last column in Table 3 also reports the weights we chose to assign to those same variables based on our own judgment of what matters most in defining financial development. Comparison of the two columns indicates that the correlations in the data do not always correspond perfectly with our a priori judgments. All the variables that bear a direct relationship to financial development appear in this list of the top 18 indicators of financial development, whereas variables only tangentially related to financial development (democratic accountability, housing finance, quality of the bureaucracy, law and order score) get close to a zero weight. The PCA does yield a sensible set of results and allows us to reduce our reliance on qualitative judgments in developing indicators of financial development.

Table 3.

Comparison of Index Weights by Variable

(In percent)

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Source: Authors’ calculations.

We added the weights assigned by PCA to the individual variables to create a set of percentage weights that measure the contribution of each of the six subindices to the summary indicator of financial development (Table 4). While we had chosen to assign the largest weights to the “banking sector” and “monetary sector/policy” themes in our original construction of the index, the PCA suggests that the variables that comprise “banking regulation/supervision” and “banking sector” are jointly the most telling indicators of financial development in our MENA data. Comparison across the last two columns of Table 4 also indicate that according to PCA, our subjective judgments overemphasized the roles of “monetary sector/policy” and the “nonbank financial sector” in constructing measures of financial development.

Table 4.

Comparison of Index Weights by Theme

(In percent)

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Source: Authors’ calculations.

C. MENA and the Rest of the World: Alternative Index

How have the financial systems within the MENA countries developed over time, and how does the MENA region compare with other regions? Since information on the comprehensive index is not available at the required level of detail either for the MENA countries over time or for other countries, we used an alternative index that we developed based solely on the available quantitative information. This index is related to the one developed by Beim and Calomiris (2001) and is based on quantitative data only. To construct the index, we combined four variables commonly used in the literature using PCA.22 The four variables were (1) ratio of broad money (M2) to GDP; (2) ratio of the assets of deposit money banks to assets of the central bank and deposit money banks; (3) reserve ratio; and (4) ratio of credit to private sector by deposit money banks to GDP. These variables measure the size of the financial sector, the importance and relative ease with which banks provide funds, and the extent to which funds are provided to the private as opposed to the public sector. Aggregating across the variables not only attempts to capture different aspects of financial development in a single measure but also reduces biases or errors that may plague a particular data series. Furthermore, in keeping with the standard practice of averaging the variables in either five-year panels or ten-year panels to smooth out business cycle fluctuations and focus on trends, we averaged the data in ten-year panels to obtain observations for the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.

The rankings of countries within the MENA region closely track each other under both the comprehensive and the alternative indices (Figure 2). This provides some confidence in using the alternative index to make intertemporal and interregional comparisons. In addition, the alternative index produces rankings of financial development similar to those developed in other research.

Figure 2.
Figure 2.

MENA Countries: Comparing the Comprehensive and Alternative Indices

Citation: IMF Working Papers 2004, 201; 10.5089/9781451874389.001.A001

Source: Authors’ calculations.

According to the alternative index, we find that most MENA countries experienced financial development from the 1960s through the 1980s (Table 5 and Figure 3). In the 1990s, many continued to experience financial deepening, although in a few countries political instability or conflict resulted in a deterioration of the index. The MENA region ranks well below the industrialized countries in financial development but above most other developing country regions. However, it is interesting that, although the MENA region ranked well above the newly industrialized economies of East and Southeast Asia in the 1960s, it fell considerably behind them in the 1980s and the 1990s, as these Asian countries stepped up financial deepening. With the exception of sub-Saharan Africa, financial development in all other regions has progressed considerably more rapidly than in most countries in the MENA region. The countries in the MENA region in which there have been important advances in financial development since the 1960s are Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Tunisia. In the remaining countries, the level of financial development over the four decades has improved only slightly or, in a couple of cases, declined.

Figure 3.
Figure 3.

MENA Countries and Global Comparators: Alternative Financial Development Index, 1960s-1990s 1/

Citation: IMF Working Papers 2004, 201; 10.5089/9781451874389.001.A001

Sources: IFS and authors’ calculations.1/ Decade averages; scale 0-10.
Table 5.

Alternative Financial Development Index, 1960s-1990s

(Averages, Scale: 0-10)

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Sources: International Financial Statistics, and authors’ calculations.

D. Regression Analysis

Finally, how is economic growth in MENA related to financial development? Little work has been done to determine the contribution of financial development to growth specifically for the MENA region. We adopted a specification closely related to the neoclassical growth model proposed by Mankiw, Romer, and Weil (1992), which has been used in several papers, including Gelbard and Leite (1999) and Khan and Senhadji (2000).23 As in other models, the specification is augmented to include a financial development term.24 We use the above indices to empirically study the contribution of financial development to real per capita GDP growth in the region. For cross-country regressions, we use data from 1992 through 2001 from the WEO and the IFS databases, taking averages over the period.25

Using the comprehensive index as the proxy for financial development, we obtain results that are somewhat in line with the literature. The signs are as expected; however, some of the variables are insignificant, including financial development. Of the components that comprise the comprehensive index, the institutional environment is the key driver. Including it along with the monetary sector index, or any of the other indices, provides results that are more in line with those found for the rest of the world. The institutional variable is strongly significant. However, the coefficients on the other financial development components are not significant, which can be explained by the high correlation among the different components (see Figure 1).

These results, based on the limited available data, suggest that strengthening the institutional environment is key to enhancing per capita growth and financial sector performance. The results make intuitive economic sense. However, we caution that there may be quite a lot of measurement error in the calculation of several of the variables, including real GDP and investment, which could downward bias the estimates.26 This points to the need for more research into the area, including further work on improving statistical quality.

V. Further Research

Further research is required not only in investigating the relationship between financial development and overall growth in the MENA countries but also in refining the measures of financial development. Our work has examined several different aspects of what constitutes financial development. The next stage of research could produce more refined measures by including, for instance, further detail in the range of financial products made available by intermediaries or in the regulatory and supervisory regime. Constructing additional measures could attempt to utilize and update the different international standards and codes assessments conducted for the MENA countries.

While refining the measure of financial development could be quite resource and time intensive, thus implying somewhat infrequent updates, more frequent monitoring could be undertaken by updating a subset of the variables. The alternative index is one option. However, another option would be to use a subset of the qualitative and quantitative variables used in the comprehensive index. The choice of variables could be driven by the weights provided by the PCA in Table 3. Such a subset would provide a simpler index than the comprehensive index, and would nevertheless be more comprehensive than the alternative index.

VI. Conclusions

MENA countries have reformed their financial sectors over the past three decades. However, while they have made progress, their efforts have been eclipsed by faster reform and growth in other parts of the world. Against the backdrop of an increasingly globalized world, the challenge for MENA policymakers in moving away from financially repressive policies will be to implement prudent macroeconomic policies, along with structural reforms. Macro-stabilizing measures, in turn, should be complemented by creating the enabling structural environment for financial development, including reduced government intervention in credit allocation and strengthened institutional quality, particularly of the legal system.

Efforts should be concentrated where financial development appears to have been the weakest. For some countries, this means less involvement of the government in the financial system, including cutting back on public ownership of financial institutions and minimizing monetary financing of budget deficits, enhancing competition, investing in human resources, promoting nonbank financial development, and strengthening the legal environment.

APPENDIX I

Methodology for Computing the Comprehensive Index of Financial Sector Development

This appendix presents the 35 qualitative and quantitative data and the methodology used to construct the comprehensive index as well as the six subindices of financial sector development. The qualitative data are rated on a 0-1-2 scale, and the quantitative data are normalized so as to be in the [0, 2] range. The weights used to construct the indices are provided in brackets.

  1. Banking Sector Size, Structure, Efficiency (Weight: 25 percent)

    1. Development and profitability of the banking sector (5 percent)

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    2. Privatization of banking sector (3 percent)

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    3. Quantitative data:

      Ratio of credit to private sector by deposit money banks to GDP (3 percent)

    4. Quantitative data:

      Deposit money bank assets/Banking sector assets (3 percent)

      Banking sector assets ≡ (Deposit money bank assets + central bank assets)

    5. Quantitative data: 1 — RR (3 percent)
      RRreserveratio=(bank reserves/broad money  currency outside banks)
    6. Interest rate spreads (banking sector competition) (3 percent)

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    7. Concentration in the banking sector (3 percent)

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    8. Are foreign banks present? (2 percent)

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  2. Development of Nonbank Financial Sector (Weight: 15 percent)

    1. Stock market (4 percent)

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    2. Housing finance (2 percent)

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    3. Other nonbank financial markets and instruments (4 percent)

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    4. Interbank transactions (5 percent)

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  3. Quality of Banking Regulation and Supervision (Weight: 15 percent)

    1. Basel capital adequacy requirements (3 percent)

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    2. Prudential monitoring of banks (3 percent)

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    3. Nonperforming loans (2 percent)

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    4. Independence of the central bank (3 percent)

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    5. Transparency and availability of financial and monetary data (4 percent)

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  4. Development of the Monetary Sector and Monetary Policy (Weight: 20 percent)

    1. Quantitative data: Ratio of M2 to GDP (5 percent)

    2. Indirect instruments of monetary policy (4 percent)

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    3. Credit controls and directed credits (3 percent)

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    4. Interest rate liberalization (5 percent)

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    5. Government securities (3 percent)

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  5. Financial Sector Openness (Weight 10 percent)

    1. Appropriate market determined exchange rate (2 percent)

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    2. Multiple exchange rates or parallel markets (1 percent)

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    3. Restrictions on foreign currency purchases by residents (2 percent)

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    4. Restrictions on the financial activities of nonresidents (2 percent)

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    5. Forward exchange market (1 percent)

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    6. Repatriation requirements (1 percent)

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    7. Article VIII status (1 percent)

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  6. Institutional Environment (Weight: 15 percent)

    1. Is it easy to recover loans through the judicial system? (4 percent)

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    2. Quantitative data: law and order tradition (Source: ICRG) (1 percent)

    3. Quantitative data: property rights index (Source: Heritage Foundation) (4 percent)

    4. Quantitative data: bureaucratic quality (Source: ICRG) (2 percent)

    5. Quantitative data: government involvement in banking/finance (Source: Heritage Foundation) (2 percent)

    6. Quantitative data: democratic accountability (Source: ICRG) (2 percent)

APPENDIX II

Abbreviated Survey Tables

Table 1A.

MENA Countries: Structure of the Banking Sector 1/

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Source: International Monetary Fund.

Unless otherwise indicated, all data in Tables 1 -6 refer to available information as of end-2002.

Table 1B.

MENA Countries: Structure of the Banking Sector

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 2.

MENA Countries: Nonbank Financial Sector

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 3A.

MENA Countries: Banking Regulation and Supervision

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 3B.

MENA Countries: Banking Regulation and Supervision

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 3C.

MENA Countries: Banking Regulation and Supervision

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 4A.

MENA Countries: Development of the Monetary Sector and Monetary Policy

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 4B.

MENA Countries: Development of the Monetary Sector and Monetary Policy

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 5.

MENA Countries: Financial Sector Openness

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Source: International Monetary Fund.
Table 6.

MENA Countries: Institutional Environment

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Sources: Heritage Foundation, ICRG, and the International Monetary Fund.

Normalized to scale of 0-2, with 2 representing the highest score.