2143. Bank-Based and Market-Based Financial Systems: Cross-Country Comparisons

Asl1 Demirgüç-Kunt and Ross Levine
(July 1999)
Financial systems tend to be more market-based in higher income countries, where stock markets also become more active and efficient than banks. Financial systems also tend to be more market-based, even after controlling for income, in countries with a common law tradition, strong protection of shareholder rights, good accounting standards, low levels of corruption, and no explicit deposit insurance.

What are the relative advantages and disadvantages of bank-based financial systems (as in Germany and Japan) and market-based financial systems (as in England and the United States). Does financial structure matter?

In bank-based systems banks play a leading role in mobilizing savings, allocating capital, overseeing the investment decisions of corporate managers, and providing risk management vehicles.

In market-based systems securities markets share center stage with banks in getting society's savings to firms, exerting corporate control, and easing risk management.

The unresolved debate about whether markets or bank-based intermediaries are more effective at providing financial services hampers the formation of sound policy advice.

Demirgüç-Kunt and Levine use newly collected data on a cross-section of roughly 150 countries to illustrate how financial systems differ around the world. They (1) analyze how the size, activity, and efficiency of financial systems differ across different per capita income groups, (2) define different indicators of financial structure and identify different patterns as countries become richer, and (3) investigate legal, regulatory, and policy determinants of financial structure after controlling for per capita GDP.

A clear pattern emerges:

This paper — a product of Finance, Development Research Group — is part of a larger effort in the group to study the impact of financial structure on economic development. Copies of the paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Kari Labrie, room MC3-456, telephone 202-473-1001, fax 202-522-1155, Internet address klabrie @worldbank.org. The authors may be contacted at ademirguckunt @worldbank.org or rlevine@csom.umn. edu. (68 pages)


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