What went wrong?
Interventionist policies of the past crippled the fledgling
financial systems of many low-income countries, including most of those in
Sub-Saharan Africa. Large budget deficits were monetized, and inflation
followed. To keep nominal rates from rising, interest rates were controlled. But
the resulting reduction in real rates reduced incentives for the formal banking
system to intermediate savings. It also fostered capital flight and encouraged
enterprises with access to credit to overborrow. Inefficient public enterprises
grew at the expense of the more efficient private sector. Many commercial banks
were nationalized. Credit was allocated by government decree. And banks lost
their ability to screen and assess credit risks. Central barking and oversight
withered to the detriment of the banking system. Bad loans accumulated, and the
losses were periodically recognized and monetizedadding to the bouts of
inflation and the unpredictability of the economic environment. This situation
has left most low-income countries ill-equipped to generate the private supply
response to structural
reforms.