Publikationsansicht

The Ministry of Finance and the disclosure of bad debts in Japan: A model (2002)

Abstract
The reluctance of The Ministry of Finance (MOF) to disclose non-performing loans in the banking industry caused a delay in its rescue operations and, as a result, exacerbated the financial crisis in Japan in the 1990s. This paper attempts to answer the question of why the MOF balked at disclosing the bad loan problem. We focus on the reputation concern of the MOF, and develop a model which explores factors that prevented the MOF from truth-telling. The model predicts that the reputation effect might be high in booms and low in recessions. Indeed, the MOF was beginning to announce the amount of bad loans after the economy had entered a recession. The model also enables us to assess the recent development of the Japanese financial system from the perspective of reputation effects.

Details der Publikation
Download http://hdl.handle.net/1885/40592
Herausgeber Australian National University
Archiv File System Repository (Australia)
Keywords Japan, Ministry of Finance, bad debts, disclosure, bad loans, bad loan disclosure, regulator, busi-fina
Typ techreport
Sprache Englisch
Coverage Australia, 2004, 21st Century