Publication: Global Survey of Development Banks
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Date
2012-02-01
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Published
2012-02-01
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Abstract
Historically, development banks have been an important instrument of governments to promote economic growth by providing credit and a wide range of advisory and capacity building programs to households, small and medium enterprises, and even large private corporations, whose financial needs are not sufficiently served by private commercial banks or local capital markets. During the current financial crisis, most development banks in Latin America, followed by Asia, Africa, and Europe, have assumed a countercyclical role by scaling up their lending operations exactly when private banks experienced temporary difficulties in granting credit to the private sector. Despite the importance of development banks during crisis and non-crisis periods, little is known about them. This survey examines how development banks operate, what their policy mandates are, what financial services they offer, which type of clients they target, how they are regulated and supervised, what business models they have adopted, what governance framework they have, and what challenges they face. It also examines the countercyclical role played by development banks during the recent financial crisis. This survey is based on new data that have been collected from 90 national development banks in 61 countries.
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“de Luna-Martinez, José; Vicente, Carlos Leonardo. 2012. Global Survey of Development Banks. Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 5969. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3255 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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