Fostering Sound Financial Sector Development
This note outlines a short, to medium-term reform agenda to foster sound financial sector development. Mexico needs to broaden and deepen its financial system without compromising the financial stability gains of the last decade. Much more private...
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Format: | Policy Note |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/04/17570373/fostering-sound-financial-sector-development http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16584 |
Summary: | This note outlines a short, to
medium-term reform agenda to foster sound financial sector
development. Mexico needs to broaden and deepen its
financial system without compromising the financial
stability gains of the last decade. Much more private
investment is needed to transform the economy to boost
productivity, and despite improvements in recent years, many
households and firms still lack adequate access to financial
services. Using the financial payments system to promote
financial inclusion is a sound way to broaden access.
However, experience in several countries has shown that
accelerated (or forced) expansion of credit can harm rather
than benefit customers. If financial institutions do not
follow sound practices, they can fail, harming borrowers and
depositors alike and creating social unrest. Institutional
failures may also lead to costly bailouts, with substantial
fiscal cost. An oversight system (both micro, and macro,
prudential) that encourages prudent-risk taking and
facilitates prompt resolution of failed institutions ensures
that strategies for financial deepening do not compromise
financial stability. |
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