Financial development in Asia [electronic resource] : beyond aggregate indicators / Tatiana Didier, Sergio L. Schmukler.

"This paper documents the major trends in financial development in Asia since the early 1990s and the spillovers to firms. It compares Asia with advanced and emerging countries and uses both aggregate and disaggregate indicators. Financial systems in Asia remain less developed than in advanced...

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Online Access: Full Text (via Open Knowledge Repository)
Main Author: Didier, Tatiana
Corporate Authors: World Bank. Latin America and the Caribbean Regional Office. Office of the Chief Economist, World Bank. Development Research Group. Macroeconomics and Growth
Other Authors: Schmukler, Sergio L.
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: [Washington, D.C.] : World Bank, [2014]
Series:Policy research working papers ; 6761.
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Summary:"This paper documents the major trends in financial development in Asia since the early 1990s and the spillovers to firms. It compares Asia with advanced and emerging countries and uses both aggregate and disaggregate indicators. Financial systems in Asia remain less developed than in advanced countries but more developed than in Eastern Europe and Latin America. Bond and stock markets play a larger role and institutional investors have gained importance. Nonetheless, capital-raising activity has not expanded. A few large companies capture most of the issuances. Many secondary markets remain illiquid. The public sector captures a significant share of bond markets. The largest advancements in Asia occurred in China and India. But still in these countries, few large companies use capital markets to expand and grow, becoming much larger than nonuser firms. In sum, Asia's financial systems remain less developed than aggregate measures suggest, with few spillovers to many firms"--Abstract.
Item Description:Title from pdf title page (World Bank Web site, viewed Jan. 27, 2014).
"The World Bank, Latin America and the Caribbean Region, Office of the Chief Economist."
"Development Research Group, Macroeconomics and Growth Team."
"January 2014."
Physical Description:1 online resource (46 pages) : illustrations.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 25-26).