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Dive into the research topics where Roberto de Rezende Rocha is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberto de Rezende Rocha.


The Journal of Financial Perspectives | 2011

What Drives the Development of the Insurance Sector? An Empirical Analysis Based on a Panel of Developed and Developing Countries

Erik Feyen; Rodney R. Lester; Roberto de Rezende Rocha

The insurance sector can play a critical role in financial and economic development. By reducing uncertainty and the impact of large losses, the sector can encourage new investments, innovation, and competition. As financial intermediaries with long investment horizons, insurance companies can contribute to the provision of long-term instruments to finance corporate investment and housing. There is evidence of a causal relationship between insurance sector development and economic growth. However, there have been few studies examining the factors that drive the development of the insurance industry. This paper contributes to the literature by examining the determinants of insurance premiums (both life and non-life premiums) and total assets for a panel of about 90 countries during the period 2000-08. The results show that life sector premiums are driven by per capita income, population size and density, demographic structures, income distribution, the size of the public pension system, state ownership of insurance companies, the availability of private credit, and religion. The non-life sector is affected by these and other variables. While some of these drivers are structural, the results also show that the development of the insurance sector can be influenced by a number of policy variables.


Archive | 2011

The Status of Bank Lending to Smes in the Middle East and North Africa Region: The Results of a Joint Survey of the Union of Arab Bank and the World Bank

Roberto de Rezende Rocha; Subika Farazi; Rania Khouri; Douglas Pearce

Among the principal constraints for SME lending is the lack of SME transparency, poor credit information from credit registries and bureaus, and weak creditor rights. If constraints can be addressed, lending can potentially reach bank targets of 21 percent. State banks still play an important role in financing SMEs in the MENA region, but they use less sophisticated risk management systems than private banks. On another hand, credit guarantee schemes are a popular form of support to SME finance in the region, and are associated with higher levels of SME lending. The paper concludes that MENA policy makers should prioritize improvements in financial infrastructure, including greater coverage and depth of credit bureaus, improvements in the collateral regime (especially for movable assets), and increased competition between banks and also non-banks. Weaknesses in insolvency regimes and credit reporting systems should also be alleviated. Direct policy interventions through public banks, guarantee schemes, lower reserve requirements and subsidized lending and other measures have played a role in compensating for MENAs weak financial infrastructure, but more sustainable structural solutions are needed.


Review of Middle East Economics and Finance | 2011

Bank Ownership and Performance in the Middle East and North Africa Region

Subika Farazi; Erik Feyen; Roberto de Rezende Rocha

Abstract Although both domestic and foreign private banks have gained ground in Middle East and North Africa (MENA) in recent years, state banks continue to play an important role in many countries. Using a MENA bank-level panel dataset for the period 2001–2008, the article contributes to the empirical literature on bank ownership and performance by documenting recent ownership trends and assessing the relations between bank ownership and performance in MENA while accounting for key bank characteristics such as size and balance sheet composition. The article is the first to analyze headline performance indicators as well as their key drivers and finds that state banks exhibit significantly weaker performance, despite their larger size and potential scale economies. This result is mainly driven by larger holdings of government securities, higher costs due to larger staffing, and larger loan-loss provisions reflecting weaker asset quality. These results seem to reflect both operational inefficiencies and policy mandates. Taken together, the results do not reject the development role of state banks, but show that their policy interventions come at a cost. As such, the article argues that there is scope to reduce the share of state banks in some MENA countries and to clarify the mandates, improve the governance, and strengthen the operational efficiency of most state banks in the region.


Archive | 2006

Competition and performance in the Hungarian second pillar

Gregorio Impavido; Roberto de Rezende Rocha

The performance of the Hungarian second pillar since inception has been mixed. This is partly due to a less than satisfactory support for the 1997 pension reform, conservative fund portfolio distributions, the hybrid nature of the mandatory pension fund system, the segmented nature of the market in terms of costs, and a less than aggressive commitment on the part of the Hungarian Financial Supervisory Authority to a low-cost, transparent, and competitive equilibrium. In the accumulation phase, the authorities would need to further promote transparency and comparability of information on costs and investment performance, facilitate migration to lower cost funds, and more generally promote competition. The regulatory framework of the payout phase needs to be overhauled before the first cohort of workers retires.


Archive | 2011

A review of credit guarantee schemes in the Middle East and North Africa Region

Youssef Saadani; Zsofia Arvai; Roberto de Rezende Rocha

Many countries in the MENA region have established partial credit guarantee schemes to facilitate SME access to finance. These schemes can play an important role, especially in a period where MENA governments are making efforts to improve the effectiveness of credit registries and bureaus and strengthen creditor rights. This paper reviews the design of partial credit guarantee schemes in MENA, and assesses their preliminary outcomes. The paper is based on a survey conducted in 10 MENA countries in early 2010. The authors find that the average size of guarantee schemes in MENA (measured by the total value of outstanding guarantees) is in line with the international average, although there are wide differences across countries, and some schemes seem too small to make any significant impact. Most importantly, the number of guarantees looks generally small while their average value looks large. This suggests that guarantee schemes are not yet reaching the smaller firms. Guarantee schemes in MENA look financially sound and most schemes have room to grow. However, this growth should be accompanied by an improvement of some key design and management features, as well as the introduction of systematic impact evaluation reviews.


Chapters | 2008

Risk-Based Supervision of Pension Funds: A Review of International Experience and Preliminary Assessment of the First Outcomes

Gregory Gordon Brunner; Richard Hinz; Roberto de Rezende Rocha

This paper provides a review of the design and experience of risk-based pension fund supervision in several countries that have been leaders in the development of these methods. The utilization of risk-based methods originates primarily in the supervision of banks. In recent years it has increasingly been extended to other types of financial intermediaries including pension funds and insurers. The trend toward risk-based supervision of pensions is closely associated with movement toward the integration of pension supervision with that of banking and other financial services into a single national authority. Although similar in concept to the techniques developed in banking, the application to pension funds has required modifications, particularly for defined contribution funds that transfer investment risk to fund members. The countries examined provide a range of experiences that illustrate both the diversity of pension systems and approaches to risk-based supervision, but also a commonality of the focus on sound risk management and effective supervisory outcomes. The paper provides a description of pension supervision in Australia, Denmark, Mexico and the Netherlands, and an initial evaluation of the results achieved in relation to the underlying objectives.


World Bank Publications | 2007

Financial sector dimensions of the Colombian pension system

Heinz P. Rudolph; Hela Cheikhrouhou; Roberto de Rezende Rocha; Craig Thorburn

This paper provides an assessment of the funded pension system and the quality of the regulatory framework for both accumulation and payout phase. It suggests that the lack of portfolio diversification may contribute in the future to low returns and poor pensions and provides a number of recommendations to expand the opportunities of investments to pension funds. The paper also finds that pension fund administrators are not exploiting the scale economies in certain areas of the business such as collection of revenues and account management, and propose mechanisms to reduce costs and increase efficiency through greater competition. The paper examines the products and options offered at the retirement age, and finds a bias toward the payment of pensions in the form of lump sums and suggests alternatives for improving the availability of other instruments. Enhancements in the regulatory framework of insurance companies are also proposed.


Archive | 2010

Designing the Payout Phase of Pension Systems: Policy Issues, Constraints and Options

Roberto de Rezende Rocha; Dimitri Vittas

This paper examines the policy issues, constraints and options facing policymakers in promoting the development of sound markets for retirement products. It discusses the various risks faced by pensioners and the risk characteristics of alternative retirement products and also reviews the risks faced by providers of retirement products and the management and regulatory challenges of dealing with these risks. The paper focuses on policies that could be adopted by developing and transitioning countries where financial and insurance markets are not well developed. It argues for promoting an adequate level of annuitization but avoiding excessive annuitization. It also argues for favoring combinations of payout options, covering different products at a particular point in time as well as different payout options over time. The paper also discusses the choice between centralized and decentralized markets and highlights the basic elements of an effective regulation of risk management.


Archive | 2010

The Payout Phase of Pension Systems: A Comparison of Five Countries

Roberto de Rezende Rocha; Dimitri Vittas; Heinz P. Rudolph

This paper provides a comparative summary of the payout phase of pension systems in five countries -- Australia, Chile, Denmark, Sweden, and Switzerland. All five countries have large pension systems with mandatory or quasi-mandatory retirement savings schemes. But they exhibit important differences in the structure and role of different pillars, regulation of payout options, level of annuitization, market structure, capital regulations, risk management, and use of risk sharing arrangements. The paper summarizes the experience of these countries and highlights the lessons they offer to other countries.


Archive | 2010

A summary and update of developing annuities markets : the experience of Chile

Roberto de Rezende Rocha; Heinz P. Rudolph

The rapid growth of the market for retirement products in Chile has its origins in the pension reform that was implemented in 1981. But the successful development of an active annuity market also reflects many other factors. This paper summarizes and updates an earlier longer study on the development of the Chilean annuity market. The update focuses on the numerous changes that were introduced in 2008. The most striking aspect of the Chilean experience is the very high rate of annuitization. This has been linked to the restrictions that have been applied to lump-sum withdrawals, the offer of inflation-protected annuities, and the robust prudential regulation of providers. But the level of annuitization has also been supported by the annuitization incentives provided to early retirees and the influence of brokers and sales agents. The recent regulatory changes have weakened the impact of the last two factors, while strengthening the demand for annuities at normal retirement.

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Zsofia Arvai

International Monetary Fund

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