Democratization and Financial Reform in Taiwan: The Political Economy of Bad-Loan Creation


Autoria(s): Sato, Yukihito
Data(s)

13/06/2006

13/06/2006

01/09/2002

Resumo

This study shows that many bad loans now burdening Taiwan's financial institutions are interrelated with the society's democratization which started in the late 1980s. Democratization made the local factions and business groups more independent from the Kuomintang government. They acquired more political influence than under the authoritarian regime. These changes induced them to manage their owned financial institutions more arbitrarily and to intervene more frequently in the state-affiliated financial institutions. Moreover they interfered in financial reform and compelled the government to allow many more new banks than it had originally planned. As a result the financial system became more competitive and the qualities of loans deteriorated. Some local factions and business groups exacerbated the situation by establishing banks in order to funnel funds to themselves, sometimes illegally. Thus many bad loans were created as the side effect of democratization.

Formato

102441 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

The Developing Economies 40.3 (2002.9): 226-251

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/111

The Developing Economies

40

3

226

251

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興会アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #Taiwan #Politics #Economy #Democratization #Finance #台湾 #政治 #経済 #民主化 #金融 #338   #AECH Taiwan 台湾 #G2 - Financial Institutions and Services #332
Tipo

Article

Journal Article