Cryptocurrencies rebound 10-fold since last yr, despite tough steps from China, India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Cryptocurrencies have rebounded with a total market value of $2.2 trillion in late September, despite tough restrictions imposed by countries like China and India, according to report by DBS Group Research.

This is a ten-fold increase since the beginning of last year. The launch of several digital asset exchanges, rollout of innovative wallets, changes in mining technology and wide issuance of stablecoins have kept the momentum strong for crypto, the report said.

Also read: China announces cryptocurrency bank – what does it mean for India?

Countries like India and China are keeping a close eye on crypto assets, as the scale and scope of this asset class are large enough to have systemic implications, it said.

Multiple reasons for the ban have been cited by the governments, such as security and governance, consumer protection, surveillance gap and monetary policy efficacy.

Also read: What are stablecoins, and how stable are they?

China’s central bank, in the last week of September, declared all transactions involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money. This was the second time the government announced a ban on crypto.

In March, it was reported that India would propose a law banning cryptocurrencies, fining anyone trading in the country or even holding such digital assets. This, again, is not the first time when India is declaring its inhibition towards adopting crypto.

The resilience of crypto assets after the ban suggests that the market impact of China’s opposition to crypto could be declining. Year-to-date, Ether is outperforming Bitcoin by 400% in price return terms.

The ban has also led miners to migrate their businesses to crypto-friendly locations, which can offer cheap, reliable and greener sources of electricity, the report said.

Kazakhstan, US and Russia are some of the preferred locations.

According to experts, China’s ban was likely because the government wants to remove competition for its digital yuan. Adding to this, India’s Reserve Bank of India has also said that it was eyeing a phased implementation of its central bank digital currency (CBDC).

Also read: RBI eyes phased implementation of CBDC, will work in unison with payment infra, says RBI’s Ranjan

CBDC adoption will help drive future usefulness, acceptance by merchants and improve cross-border payments, according to banking regulators.

However, there is still a lot of time for countries to roll out their CBDCs. To maintain stability, CBDCs would need to have a careful design and implementation, the report said.



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China’s hidden debt, a major problem for borrowers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Different countries owe at least USD 385 billion amount of debt to China which has slipped through scrutiny of international lenders such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The “hidden debt” is due to an increasing number of deals struck not directly between governments through central banks but through often opaque arrangements with a range of financing institutions, hence “the debt burdens were kept off the public balance sheets,” Radio Free Asia reported citing a four-year study by AidData.

“Chinese debt burdens are substantially larger than research institutions, credit rating agencies, or intergovernmental organizations with surveillance responsibilities previously understood,” the study said.

The study also added that nearly 70 per cent of China’s overseas lending “is now directed to state-owned companies, state-owned banks, special purpose vehicles, joint ventures, and private sector institutions in recipient countries” rather than sovereign borrowers which are central government institutions, Radio Free Asia reported.

Meanwhile, China is also using confidentiality clauses barring borrowers from revealing terms and conditions of the engagement or even the existence of the debt itself.

International Forum for Right and Security (IFFRAS), reported that recent joint research by the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Kiel Institute for the World Economy and the Centre for Global Development & Aid Data concluded that it uses these contracts to debt-trap the borrowing nations.



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Indonesia to regulate cryptocurrencies and not prohibit it like China, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Indonesian minister for trade, Muhammad Luthfi confirmed to the local media Berita Satu about tightening cryptocurrencies regulations rather than prohibiting it like China. He said that Indonesia will focus on making cryptomarket less susceptible to illegal activities, Bitcoin.com reported

The statement from the Indonesian minister comes in the wake of stupendous growth registered by local exchanges in the first half of the year owing to the flourishing cryptocurrency market for 1 and a half years.

  • The report shows a 40 percent hike in transactions from 13 crypto exchanges in the first 5 months of 2021.
  • These crypto exchanges are regulated by the Futures Exchange Supervisory board.
  • The transaction volume reached $4.5 billion in 2020.
  • Crypto trading users also increased to 6.5 million in May 2021 from 4 million in 2020. This is more than the investors in Indonesia stock exchange (IDX) at just 5.37 million in May, according to Jakarta post.

China’s continued campaign against crypto trading and the final ban on 24th September affected Indonesian crypto prices too Currently Bitcoin, Ethereum and Dogecoin are legalized assets and commodities in Indonesia which can be traded by the citizens but can’t be used as a means of payment.

Major Indonesian exchange Luno Indonesia‘s manager expressed confidence in future growth of the customer base from the current 70,000 users.



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China announces cryptocurrency ban – what does it mean for India?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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After the Chinese government declared all cryptocurrency transactions illegal, major currencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum tumbled on Friday and Saturday.

The ban makes it difficult for individuals to buy crypto, and could make it harder for companies to exchange it for yuan. This is the second crypto ban the country has declared, the first was in 2017.

Many crypto exchanges and providers were seen rushing to cut ties with Chinese users after the ban.

Shares in crypto-related firms fell on Monday, with crypto asset manager Huobi Tech plunging 23% and OKG Technology Holdings Ltd, a fintech company majority owned by Xu Mingxing and founder of cryptoexchange OKcoin, losing 12%.

China had recently announced that it would be launching its own digital currency. According to experts, the ban was likely because the government wants to remove competition for its digital yuan.

A visitor passes by a logo for the e-CNY, a digital version of the Chinese Yuan, displayed during a trade fair in Beijing, China, Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021. China's central bank on Friday, Sept. 24, 2021 declared all transactions involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money. It is developing an electronic version of the country's yuan for cashless transactions that can be tracked and controlled by Beijing. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
A visitor passes by a logo for the e-CNY, a digital version of the Chinese Yuan, displayed during a trade fair in Beijing, China, Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021. China’s central bank on Friday, Sept. 24, 2021 declared all transactions involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money. It is developing an electronic version of the country’s yuan for cashless transactions that can be tracked and controlled by Beijing. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

To worry.. or not to worry?

Bulls in crypto market are, however, using the fall in prices as a buying opportunity. “I’ll just keep buying more Bitcoin every time it dips,” said Jess Powell, chief executive officer of US crypto exchange Kraken, in an interview with Bloomberg.

According to Powell, every time China has banned Bitcoin, within 90 days the currency has bounced back much stronger than it was before.

Most experts suggest that the impact of the ban is a short-term one, and investors do not have to worry about the drop.

Furthermore, operations in the long run are unlikely to be affected because most Chinese Bitcoin mining companies had moved their operations to crypto-friendly countries in the first crackdown. China is the biggest player in bitcoin mining.

When the ban was announced, Indian exchanges dealing in such assets saw a rush to sell smaller crypto currencies, while veteran investors were relatively calm, according to reports. Some market participants believe that Indian crypto investors will be impacted the same way the global investor will be impacted.

While some believe that since every country has their own demand and supply, the crackdown creates no direct linkage to investment behaviour, even in India. However, some short-term nervousness in buying Bitcoins is likely in the near future on fears of other governments following suit.

With the ban, nearly 20% of the internet population will be out of the market, creating opportunity for India to further grow in the space. Industry players believe that the crackdown will serve as an opportunity for India to become a global leader in crypto.

As a result, every mining operation outside China, including India, benefits because their mining reward, which is proportional to their share of the global hash rate of the Bitcoin network, automatically rises.

Accordingly, a study by Nasscomm and cryptoexchange WazirX said the cryptotech industry in India can create an economic value addition of $184 billion by 2030.

The industry, which includes crypto applications in trading, payments, remittances, and retail among others, is estimated to have grown 39% CAGR in India in the past five years.

Click here to read our coverage on Cryptocurrency



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What’s new in China’s crackdown on crypto?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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China‘s most powerful regulators have intensified the country’s crackdown on cryptocurrencies with a blanket ban on all crypto transactions and crypto mining.

The move sent bitcoin and other major coins lower, as well as pressurising crypto and blockchain-related stocks.

What’s new?

Ten Chinese agencies, including the central bank and banking, securities and foreign exchange regulators, have vowed to work together to root out “illegal” cryptocurrency activity.

While China has been putting in place increasingly stricter rules on virtual currencies, it has now made all activities related to them illegal and sent a signal of intent they plan to get even tougher on enforcing the rules.

China’s central People’s Bank of China (PBoC) said it was illegal to facilitate cryptocurrency trading and that it planned to severely punish anyone doing so, including those working for overseas platforms from within China.

The National Development and Reform Council (NDRC) said it would launch a nationwide crackdown on cryptocurrency mining as it tries to phase the sector out entirely.

What’s come before?

China does not recognise cryptocurrencies as legal tender and the banking system does not accept cryptocurrencies or provide relevant services.

In 2013, the government defined bitcoin as a virtual commodity and said individuals were allowed to freely participate in its online trade.

However, later that year, financial regulators, including the PBoC, banned banks and payment companies from providing bitcoin-related services.

In September 2017, China banned initial coin offerings (ICOs) in a bid to protect investors and curb financial risks.

The ICO rules also banned cryptocurrency trading platforms from converting legal tender into cryptocurrencies and vice versa.

The restrictions prompted most such trading platforms to shut down with many moving offshore.

The ICO rules also barred financial firms and payment companies from providing services for ICOs and cryptocurrencies, including account openings, registration, trading, clearing and liquidation services.

By July 2018, 88 virtual currency trading platforms and 85 ICO platforms had withdrawn from the market, the PBOC said.

Why does it keep tightening the rules?

The huge run-up in price in bitcoin and other coins over the past year has revived cryptocurrency trading in China, with investors finding ways round the existing regulations. That’s come as the country is trying to develop its own official digital currency, becoming the first major economy to do so.

Earlier this year, Chinese regulators tightened restrictions that banned financial institutions and payment companies from providing services related to cryptocurrency. An industry directive said that speculative bitcoin trading had rebounded and was infringing “the safety of people’s property and disrupting the normal economic and financial order”.

Many Chinese investors were now trading on platforms owned by Chinese exchanges that had relocated overseas, including Huobi and OKEx. Meanwhile, China’s over-the-counter market for cryptocurrencies has become busy again, while once-dormant trading chartrooms on social media have revived.

China-focused exchanges, which also include Binance and MXC, allow Chinese individuals to open accounts online, a process that takes just a few minutes. They also facilitate peer-to-peer deals in OTC markets that help convert Chinese yuan into cryptocurrencies.

Such transactions are made through banks, or online payment channels such as Alipay or WeChat Pay, though these have since promised to conduct due diligence on clients and set up monitoring systems targeting key websites and accounts to detect illegal crypto-related transactions.

Retail investors also buy “computing power” from cryptocurrency miners, who design various investment schemes that promise quick and fat returns.

What’s the impact of the crackdown?

While cryptocurrencies fell on Friday, the fall was less pronounced than the slide seen in May when China’s State Council, or cabinet, vowed to crack down on bitcoin mining.

The test will be whether China is able to find and punish platforms and people breaking the rules.

Some analysts said that based on what’s gone before, determined investors would still likely find a way to trade.

“While retail traders in China may no longer be able to access online exchange platforms that are now illegal, crypto funds may be able to move management of their funds offshore,” said Ganesh Viswanath Natraj, Assistant Professor of Finance at Warwick Business School.



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Analysts, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HSBC and Standard Chartered could face spillover damage to their profits and balance sheets from the debt crisis enveloping China‘s Evergrande Group even though the two banks say they have limited their direct exposure, analysts have warned.

Other banks and insurers could also suffer indirect effects such as loss of fees or a devaluation of their investments.

HSBC and StanChart make a big chunk of their profits in China and Hong Kong and they have been the foreign banks most involved in underwriting syndicated loans for developers there.

That means they are likely to face the most immediate second-order impacts, analysts at JPMorgan said in a research report.

HSBC and Standard Chartered both declined to comment on the report.

Evergrande has left global investors guessing over whether it will make a key interest payment, adding to fears of big losses for bondholders and sending tremors through China’s property sector and economy.

Hong Kong and mainland China accounted for around 84% of HSBC’s profits in 2020 while Greater China and North Asia contributed 81% of StanChart’s profits last year, according to a Reuters analysis of filings by the two companies – underscoring the region’s importance to their overall businesses.

The two have the most direct lending exposure among foreign banks to China’s property sector – $17 billion or 1.5% of group assets for HSBC and $1.3 billion or 0.5% of group loans at StanChart, according to JPMorgan.

The property sector contributes 14% of China’s GDP or 25% if indirect contributions are included, JPMorgan said, and property loans are worth some 6.6% of total loans, meaning a hit to the sector could have significant wider economic impacts.

HSBC and Standard Chartered have both said they have no direct exposure to Evergrande, and that they have taken steps in recent years to carefully manage their exposures to any one sector.

HSBC has already sold all positions in its China bond or Asia credit portfolios with exposure to Evergrande, a source at the bank said.

Citing Dealogic data, JPMorgan said HSBC has been involved in underwriting 39 outstanding syndicated loans for Chinese developers while StanChart has worked on 18 such deals, which could come under pressure if there are wider property sector defaults.

In a syndicated loan banks typically underwrite the deal and then sell the debt to other investors, but may keep some of the exposure on their books.

“There is a risk that this is not an idiosyncratic event but an industry-wide problem which could result in significant spillover damage,” JPMorgan said.

The US bank said it estimates there could be a further 11 defaults worth some $30 billion this year across the Chinese high-yield property sector, amounting to a 23% default rate.

Market chill

Other European financial firms also face a negative impact on business lines such as capital markets, asset management and private banking, said Dierk Brandenburg, head of financial institutions at ratings agency Scope.

“These will impact the profit and loss figures of Europe’s globally active banks in the coming quarters, as could the ensuing regulatory crackdown by Chinese authorities,” he said.

Chinese real-estate companies have tapped the public US dollar bond market for $274 billion in the past five years, Scope analysts said, citing Bond Radar data, suggesting foreign banks could lose out on fees if such deals dwindle.

Insurers’ investment portfolios could also be affected, said Volker Kudszus, Sector Lead for EMEA Insurance at S&P Global Ratings.

“We are not concerned by direct exposure of European insurers to Evergrande, but indirect exposure, e.g. through investments in the Chinese equity or real estate market, might see some volatility,” Kudszus said.

Insurers Prudential, Ageas and Swiss Re were likely to have the most exposure to Chinese real estate, Morningstar analysts said this week.

Ageas said its Chinese joint venture company had no direct exposure to Evergrande but around 2% of the corporate bond portfolio was invested in highly-rated Chinese real estate debt.

“Only further widespread spillover to the general stock markets would have an impact on our results,” an Ageas spokesperson said.

Prudential Chief Executive Mike Wells told CNBC this week that the insurer’s exposure to Evergrande was “de minimis”, and that less than 5% of the insurer’s bond holdings were in Chinese real estate.

Prudential also has a joint venture in China.

Swiss Re did not have direct investments in Chinese property in its real estate portfolio, a spokesperson said.



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Chinese banks try to calm fears about developer’s debts, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Seeking to dispel fears of financial turmoil, some Chinese banks are disclosing what they are owed by a real estate developer that is struggling under $310 billion in debt, saying they can cope with a potential default.

The announcements came as Evergrande Group promised to talk with some individual investors who bought its debt while creditors waited to see whether Beijing will intervene to oversee a restructuring to prevent financial disruptions.

Evergrande‘s struggle to meet government-imposed debt limits has prompted fears a default might disrupt the Chinese economy or global financial markets. While ratings agencies say a default appears likely, economists say Beijing can prevent a credit crunch in China but wants to avoid bailing out Evergrande while it tries to force companies to reduce debt levels.

One of Evergrande’s biggest lenders, Zheshang Bank Co. said it is owed 3.8 billion yuan ($588 million) and has “sufficient collateral.”

“The overall risk is controllable,” the bank said in a written answer to questions on a website run by the Shanghai Stock Exchange. It said a “risk situation… will not have a significant impact” on the bank.

Others, including Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Ltd., gave no financial figures but said their lending was small, tied to individual projects and secured by claims to land. The Pudong bank said it was in “close communication” with Evergrande.

Changshu Rural Commercial Bank Co. in the eastern province of Jiangsu said it had 3.9 million yuan ($600,000) in outstanding loans to Evergrande, secured by land. The biggest state-owned commercial lenders including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd. didn’t respond to questions.

Evergrande was caught by stricter borrowing limits imposed on real estate last year by regulators who are trying to reduce surging debt levels the ruling Communist Party worries might drag on economic growth that already is in long-term decline.

Regulators have yet to say what Beijing might do, but economists say if the ruling party gets involved, it probably will focus on making sure families get apartments they already have paid for, rather than trying to bail out banks or other creditors.

Evergrande is one of China’s biggest private sector conglomerates, with more than 200,000 employees, 1,300 projects in 280 cities and assets of 2.3 trillion yuan ($350 billion). It owes creditors some 2 trillion yuan ($310 billion).

Other major developers such as Vanke Co., state-owned Poly Group and Wanda Group have not reported similar problems. But hundreds of smaller developers have shut down since regulators in 2017 started tightening control over financing.

On Friday, investors in Evergrande debt who gathered at its headquarters in the southern city of Shenzhen said the company agreed to hold a phone meeting with them. Dozens of police officers with six vehicles stood guard outside the building.

Evergrande said earlier it negotiated details of an interest payment due Thursday to banks and other bondholders in China but gave no details.

The company has yet to say whether it will make an $83.5 million payment that was due Thursday on a bond abroad. It has 30 days before it is declared in default, but economists say the company appears to be focused on repaying creditors within China.

Meanwhile, Evergrande is offering to repay some investors in its debt with apartments and other property.

The offer applies to investors who hold a total of about 40 billion yuan ($6 billion) of debt issued by its Evergrande Wealth unit. News reports say they usually are retail customers, employees of Evergrande contractors and the company’s own workforce.

Evergrande said Thursday investors can apply online for available properties.



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India likely to block Chinese investment in LIC’s IPO

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India wants to block Chinese investors from buying shares in Life Insurance Corp (LIC), which is due to go public, four senior government officials and a banker told Reuters, underscoring tensions between the two nations.

State-owned LIC is considered a strategic asset, commanding more than 60 per cent of India’s life insurance market withmore than $500 billion assets. While the government plans to allow foreign investors to participate in what is likely to be the country’s biggest-ever IPO worth a potential $12.2 billion, the sources said it is cautious of Chinese ownership, the sources said.

Read also: Centre’s big push to LIC’s mega IPO

Political tensions

Political tensions between the countries rocketed last year after their soldiers clashed on the disputed Himalayan border, and since then, India has sought to limit Chinese investment insensitive companies and sectors, banned a raft of Chinese mobile apps and subjected imports of Chinese goods to extra scrutiny.

“With China after the border clashes it cannot be business as usual. The trust deficit has significantly widen(ed),” said one of the government officials, adding that Chinese investment in companies like LIC could pose risks.

The sources declined to be identified as discussions on how Chinese investment might be blocked ongoing, and no final decisions have been made.

The finance ministry and LIC did not respond to Reuters emailed requests for comment. China’s foreign ministry and commerce ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

FII investments likely

Aiming to solve budget constraints, the Centre hopes to raise ₹90,000 crore by selling 5 per cent to 10 per cent of LIC this financial year which ends in March. The government has yet to decide whether it will sell one tranche of shares seeking to raise the full amount or choose to seek the funds in two tranches, sources have said.

Under current law, no overseas investors can invest in LIC, but the government is considering allowing foreign institutional investors to buy up to 20 per cent of LIC’s offering.

Options to prevent Chinese investment in LIC include amending the current law on foreign direct investment with a clause related to LIC or creating a new law specific to LIC, two of the government officials said.

They added that the government was conscious of the difficulty in checking on Chinese investments that could come indirectly and would attempt to craft a policy that would protect India’s security but not deter overseas investors.

A third option being explored is barring Chinese investors from becoming cornerstone investors in the IPO, said one government official and the banker, although that would not prevent Chinese investors from buying shares in the secondary market.

Ten investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and SBI Capital Market have been chosen to handle the offering.

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World Bank’s call to discontinue ‘Doing Business Report’ irks Pakistan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The World Bank‘s decision to discontinue ‘Doing Business Report‘ has irked Pakistan as it was confident that the country would make a leap in the next report to improve the current ranking of 108th, Dawn newspaper reported.

Previously, Pakistan progressed 39 places to secure 108th place on the ease of doing business global ranking, in the last two years. According to the Pakistani daily, the companies’ registration through the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) has shown a 63 per cent growth.

Fareena Mazhar, Board of Investment (BoI) Secretary said that they were hopeful that the work which they were doing in regulatory reforms would provide an edge in terms of any future mapping criteria. One of the main things that Pakistan was hoping to capitalize on was the promulgation of commercial courts in Punjab province.

Last week, the World Bank Group decided to discontinue publication of its Doing Business report following allegations of irregularities. The decision was taken after a probe of data irregularities due to pressure by some top bank officials to boost China‘s ranking in 2017 came forth.

The Doing Business report assesses regulatory environments, ease of business startups, infrastructure and other business climate measures.

“After reviewing all the information available to date on Doing Business, including the findings of past reviews, audits, and the report the Bank released today (Thursday) on behalf of the Board of Executive Directors, World Bank Group management has taken the decision to discontinue the Doing Business report,” it said in a statement posted on the website.

The probe of data irregularities cited ‘undue pressure’ by top bank officials, including then-Chief Executive Kristalina Georgieva, to boost China’s ranking in 2017.

Georgieva, now the Managing Director of International Monetary Fund, and a key adviser pressured staff to ‘make specific changes to China’s data points’ and boost its ranking at a time when the Bank was seeking China’s support for a big capital increase.



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Why World Bank is under fire over set of rankings, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Under fire for allegations that it bowed to pressure from China and other governments, the World Bank has dropped a popular report that ranked countries by how welcoming they are to businesses. The report is important to many companies and investors around the world: They use the World Bank’s “Doing Business” report to help decide where to invest money, open manufacturing plants or sell products.

Eager to attract investment, countries around the world, especially developing economies, have sought to improve their rankings in the World Bank’s report.

Sometimes, nations would pursue substantive policy changes – by, for example, making it easier for businesses to pay taxes, obtain loans or enforce contracts. Sometimes, they would take a more aggressive tack: Like pushy high schoolers cajoling a teacher for a higher grade, they would lobby the World Bank to provide a higher score on the “Doing Business” report

Countries that have scored a high ranking have often touted their success. In 2017, for example, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took to Twitter to celebrate India’s big improvement in 2017. In Rwanda, the country’s development board employs a “Doing Business economist.”

But the World Bank has long been accused of using sloppy methodology and of succumbing to political pressure in producing the “Doing Business” rankings. This week, the bank dropped the report after investigators had reviewed internal complaints about “data irregularities” in the 2018 and 2020 editions of “Doing Business” and possible “ethical matters” involving World Bank staff members.

In an investigation conducted for the bank, the law firm WilmerHale concluded that staff members fudged the data to make China look better under pressure from Kristalina Georgieva, then the CEO of the World Bank and now head of the International Monetary Fund, and the office of Jim Yong Kim, then the World Bank’s president.

Here is a closer look at the controversy:

___

WHAT IS THE WORLD BANK?

Founded in 1944, the 189-country World Bank makes grants and loans, often to finance big public works projects, and offers economic advice, mostly to developing nations. The bank, based in Washington, has also pledged to reduce poverty around the world.

___

WHAT IS THE “DOING BUSINESS” REPORT?

In 2002, the bank introduced the report, whose annual rankings highlight which countries have adopted policies favorable to businesses and which haven’t – and how much they’re improving or regressing. The bank, which collects information from about tens of thousands of accountants, lawyers and other professionals in 190 countries, assesses how easy it is to do such things as start a business, obtain a construction permit or connect to the electrical grid. Last year, New Zealand ranked No. 1 and Somalia No. 190. The United States was No. 6.

___

WHY WAS THE REPORT IMPORTANT?

Its rankings have been interpreted by the media and by investors as a proxy for how much countries welcome foreign investment.

“Any quantitative model of country risk has built this into ratings,” says Timothy Ash, an emerging market strategist at the fixed income manager BlueBay Asset Management. “Money and investments are allocated on the back of this series.”

___

WHY DID “DOING BUSINESS” COME UNDER FIRE?

Questions surrounding the report date back to at least 2018, when Paul Romer, then the chief economist of the World Bank, who would go on to win a Nobel Prize in economics for his earlier work, resigned after complaining about how “Doing Business treated” Chile.

As a result of methodological tinkering, the South American country had plunged in the rankings while socialist Michelle Bachelet occupied the presidency, rebounded under conservative Sebastian Pinera, then slumped again when Bachelet returned to power. The ups and downs occurred despite little actual change in policy, according to a summary of events by the Center for Global Development think tank, which called then for the bank to “ditch” the report.

Justin Sandefur, a senior fellow at the center, contends that the rankings have always reflected a bias against government intervention in the economy. He said, for example, that the rankings have failed to properly assess any benefits from state spending or worker and consumer protections.

“It came from a very strong anti-regulatory anti- tax, get-the-state-out-of-the-way-so-the-private-sector-can-thrive approach,” Sandefur said. “That was the original sin. It is deep in the DNA” of the report.

WilmerHale delivered another blow to the World Bank and the “Doing Business” rankings. World Bank staffers who were compiling the 2018 report were preparing to knock China down to No. 85 in the rankings from No. 78 the year before. The downgrade would have come at a time when the World Bank was trying to raise capital – an effort in which Beijing, the bank’s No. 3 shareholder, was expected to play a “key role,” according to the law firm’s report.

The investigation found that Georgieva “became directly involved in efforts to improve China’s ranking.'”

According to the investigation, she also lambasted the bank’s China director for “mismanaging” the bank’s relations with Beijing and for failing to appreciate how important the “Doing Business” rankings were to the Chinese leadership. Under pressure from the top, the investigators found, the bank staff decided to give China more credit for a new law involving so-called secured transactions – typically, loans that involve collateral.

The upshot was that China ended up back where it was the rankings – No. 78. (Other changes affected the rankings of Azerbaijan, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.)

WilmerHale concluded that bank staffers knew that the changes to the report were “inappropriate” but feared retaliation – including dismissal – if they expressed concern. The law firm referred to a “toxic culture” at the bank.

In a statement, Georgieva rejected the report: “I disagree fundamentally with the findings and interpretations of the Investigation of Data Irregularities as it relates to my role in the World Bank’s Doing Business report of 2018.”

Eswar Prasad, a professor of trade policy at Cornell University, said the “Doing Business” report was already losing favour:

“In recent years, the increasing politicization of the report’s presentation and analysis of data had already undercut its credibility and diminished its value to international investors.”

The incident also highlights China’s growing willingness to throw its weight around in international organizations such as the World Bank and the World Health Organization.

“China is clearly not shy about using its rising clout in international organizations to control the narrative about its economy and its government’s policy choices,” Prasad says. “For international institutions trying to remain relevant in a fast-changing world, keeping a major shareholder such as China happy can sometimes override more objective analytical considerations.” (AP) NSA



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