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State-Run Economies: From Public To Private

2012-03-28 06:26:11

October 10 2009 | Filed Under Banking , Business , Economics , Economy ,

Financial Theory

How do you build something from nothing? The early 1990s witnessed an

unprecedented challenge - creating free market economies in a huge geographic

region with no market culture to speak of: the former Iron Curtain countries of

Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. Read on to examine one

of the most fascinating and controversial parts of that transition: the mass

privatization of state-run economies and the attempt to create sustainable

financial market mechanisms.

The Wall Fell - Now What?

The iconic Berlin Wall images in December 1989 were unforgettable, but they

soon gave way to concerns over what the future had in store. The Soviet

economic model operated under central planning, with an absence of organic

market mechanisms to facilitate uninhibited trade between buyers and sellers of

goods and services. Much of what is taken for granted in market economies -

prices fluctuating in response to supply and demand, capital markets

facilitating the efficient investment of national savings into profit-seeking

businesses - simply did not exist in Hungary, Russia or Uzbekistan before the

dawn of the 1990s.

The challenge was to build an investment culture - private businesses owned by

investors and financial conduits such as banks, stock exchanges and

broker-dealers to enable the flow of capital. The state - the sole shareholder

of the country's income-producing assets - was to sell off its interests into

private hands.

Two questions immediately arose. First, into whose hands? Under the socialist

system, the state was legally considered to be something like a trustee of the

national property on behalf of its citizens who, according to Marxist theory,

were to own the means of production (according to Marxist theory, the resources

and apparatus by which goods and services are created). Somehow, the transfer

of ownership had to take this notion into account.

The second question was price. What were these assets worth? Given the legacy

of central planning, any traditional valuation benchmarks - cash flow,

appraised asset value, earnings or book value multiples - were meaningless.

Moreover, this was simply appraising the value of one or two assets. Each

country had thousands of identifiably distinct economic entities, each of which

required some strategy for transferring ownership. Time was of the essence, but

so was getting it right. (Learn more on the valuation of assets in our related

article Relative Valuation: Don't Get Trapped.)

Enter the Consultants

This problem galvanized the attention of Western governments, which saw

economic viability as essential to democracy and integration into the global

community. In the early 1990s, the U.S. and Europe earmarked billions from

their federal budgets to provide technical assistance to solve the problem of

transition to market economies. The US Agency for International Development

(USAID), the World Bank, the British Know-How Fund and the European Union's

TACIS organization were prominent among the organizations providing donor

assistance. (For further reading, be sure to read What Is The World Bank?)

In a practical sense, this meant that the new Marriotts, Hiltons and Sheratons

rising up among the boxy Soviet-style offices and older historical buildings in

the region's downtown centers were soon teeming with sharply-dressed Western

consultants - experts in one or another area of finance, law and economics -

full of ideas about how to accomplish this massive transition from state

ownership to private enterprise.

Mass Privatization

While every country from Croatia to Kazakhstan had its own way of looking at

this problem, a general model emerged. This model had two basic components.

First, privatize as much as possible, as quickly as possible. Second, set up

the requisite infrastructure, again, as quickly as possible. The technical

assistance contracts awarded to large global consulting firms like KPMG, Booz

Allen Hamilton and PriceWaterhouseCoopers had eye-popping tasks and deadlines.

Privatize 4,000 companies in the next 12 months.

Create a securities market regulator and a full set of laws regulating capital

markets. Build a stock exchange. Conduct initial public offerings.

Form self-regulatory organizations for local broker-dealers, where

broker-dealers didn't even exist. (Check out our IPO Basics Tutorial for

related reading.)

Small-Scale Auctions

Before any of that could happen, though, countries and their advisors had to

wrap their arms around what actually was to be privatized, and how. Mass

privatization took into account three distinct approaches, each for a

particular type of enterprise. At the bottom were the many small shops,

services and businesses with little in the way of assets or income. These made

up the small-scale privatization program and were by and large auctioned off

for whatever consideration (financial or barter) an interested party would pay.

Strategically Important Assets

On the other end of the scale were assets deemed to have strategic importance.

Natural resources like oil and gas, energy utilities and telecommunications

companies dominated this group. In many cases, these were either not privatized

at all or the state retained a controlling interest while issuing minority

stakes to investors. Because these assets made up a relatively small number of

enterprises and because the businesses were understandable - production and

distribution of crude oil, for example, or provision of local telephone

services - the strategic privatization program, also called case-by-case

privatization, more closely resembled prevailing privatization methodologies

elsewhere in the world. Investors who bought minority stakes in, for example,

Russia's telecommunications monopoly Svyazinvest, owned their interest in the

form of traditional common shares of equity. (This structure can be very

effective, but it is also known for its abuse of power. Read Early Monopolies:

Conquest And Corruption for more information.)

Voucher Privatization

In between these two methods was the heart of mass privatization: mid-sized and

larger companies that were too big for the small-scale program but not

sufficiently important for case-by-case privatization. The most common method

for this, variations of which took place in the Czech Republic, Romania,

Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and elsewhere, was the so-called voucher or coupon

program. All national citizens could participate by purchasing, for a notional

sum, a book of coupons entitling the bearer to participate in mass

privatization tenders. Voucher holders would tender their coupons for ownership

interests in the companies being offered. A government agency created

specifically for the purpose of mass privatization would organize and conduct

the tender with assistance of the Sheraton-dwelling Western consultants from

the international donor programs.

The reasoning behind the voucher program was to build the foundations of an

investor society, in which citizens quickly learn the ropes of free market

economics because they themselves are invested. Developers of these programs

also saw vouchers as a neat way to solve the valuation problem. Values simply

derived from the notional value of the vouchers. Once the objects were in the

hands of these private investors, the thinking went, the invisible hand of the

market would work and the new "owners" of any enterprise could freely buy and

sell among each other, allowing for value and price discovery along the way.

(To learn more of free-market economics, be sure to check out our Economics

Basics tutorial.)

Challenges and Controversies

Problems surfaced as the voucher programs commenced in the early 1990s. A major

one was the lack of supporting infrastructure. Another was that people who had

spent their entire careers working for the state, living in government-provided

apartments, not understanding private savings, were not ideally positioned to

become effective owners of profit-seeking assets. A third was that this absence

of effective infrastructure or stewardship opened the door for fraud and

exploitation.

To address the first two of these problems, promoters encouraged the formation

of financial intermediaries, giving rise to what were known as investment

privatization funds (IPFs). In theory IPFs were to act as asset aggregators

similar to mutual funds. IPFs could purchase vouchers from the citizen holders,

offering a return above whatever notional face value they had. Fresh from their

investment training programs led by the Western consultants, IPF professionals

could potentially help spur price discovery by actively bidding on interests in

the newly privatized companies. Observers believed that once the various pieces

of the financial and regulatory infrastructure were in place, these

organizations would eventually evolve into fully-fledged securities

organizations with broker-dealer, investment banking and asset management

capabilities.

Although the theory behind the IPFs and voucher privatization was compelling,

it seemed to pay little attention to the practicalities of implementation. In

reality, the citizenry of the socialist economies had little to do with the

running of anything outside a small group of politically-connected individuals

known as the nomenklatura. Contrary to the original goal of privatization in

getting assets out of state control as soon as possible, the real faces of the

old state - the nomenklatura - reappeared through control of the IPFs, the

privatization agencies and other parties directly related to the process. In

the absence of effective monitoring systems and their detailed understanding of

real power structures, these groups were able to profit from these programs in

ways that the original planners had not fully foreseen.

Muddling Through

For all the problems, though, these countries managed to muddle through their

first decade as market economies. Despite chronic inflation, the 1998 Russian

debt default, political fragility and endemic corruption, the region emerged

into the global economy. Accession to the European Union began in 2004 and now

includes 10 former Warsaw Pact countries: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia,

Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. Ukraine has

an active corporate bond market. In May 2007 investment manager Van Eck Global

launched New Vectors Russia, a NYSE-traded exchange traded fund (ETF). Clearly,

the market has come a long way in a relatively short time.

Conclusions

The mass privatization of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Unions is a

unique and fascinating economic case study. The task - to create market

economies where none existed in the shortest time possible - was unprecedented

and fraught with challenge in the translation from theory to practice. Despite

the difficulties, the region has emerged as an integral part of the global

economy, albeit one with its own local color and characteristics that will

likely be around for some time to come.

by Katrina Lamb

Katrina Lamb is an investment analyst based in Washington, DC, where she

researches and advises on portfolio strategies employing a wide range of asset

classes and means of investment exposure. Katrina has spent more than 15 years

in the investment profession including a great deal time of living and working

overseas in markets such as Japan, Southeast Asia, Central and Eastern Europe

and the former Soviet Union. She is fluent in several languages including

Russian and Japanese.