Bankers in Japan and China are masters of accounting, not risk
management, and American-style rescue packages won't solve their
banking crises. Cleaning up balance sheets and purging
non-performing loans won't work either, say Arayama and
Mourdoukoutas. The problem goes deeper. It stems from high growth
environments and tight government regulation. The result has been
to limit competition in Japan and eliminate it in China. And that
led to the control of management behavior, which weakened
incentives for Japanese and Chinese bank decision-makers to manage,
hands-on, their traditional and nontraditional banking risks.
Adding to the problem is rationed credit, reflecting MITI and MOF
priorities in Japan and those set by the central planning
authorities in China. Japanese bankers have been turned into
experts on the abacus, the ancient calculator, but they have little
experience with or understanding of the other more important
aspects of the banking enterprise. Arayama and Mourdoukoutas lay it
all out in a challenging, provocative, readable study and analysis.
It is an essential resource for academicians and policymakers in
business, government, and international finance and investment.
Arayama and Mourdoukoutas make it clear that Japanese and
Chinese bankers must learn how to behave as for-profit
institutions, where managers are accountable to the owners and
other stakeholders. Second, they must be freed from government
directives (in China) and guidance (in Japan) that control their
day-to-day operations, and which restrict freedom to develop new
products and businesses. Third, Japanese and Chinese bank managers
must learn to act as true bankers. They must learn how to manage
credit risk and function as public trading corporations. They must
also learn how to deal with transparency and full disclosure rules
and regulations, just as their Western counterparts must and do. In
other words, say the authors, bank managers must escape the abacus
mentality and learn how to use their brains rather than their
fingers... and that may take much longer than anxious Western
observers would have expected.
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