The Development of Effective Securities Markets Gary Schinasi
International Monetary Fund One of the more important lessons of the
crisis of the 1990s--^not just the Asian Crisis--is that the performance
and structure of a country's financial system is an important
fundamental factor for assessing that coimtry's overall economic
performance and prospects, and as a destination for investment and asset
returns. Market participants that are presently managing international
portfolios now understand this very well. And as we all know, many
countries are making strong efforts to reform their financial
infrastructures, and move their financial systems more in the direction
of a market-intermediated financial system and away from an exclusively
bank-intermediated system. These reform efforts are putting in place
some of the important infrastructure elements that are necessary for
developing effective securities markets. However, emphasis should be
placed on the word necessary: as many of these measures, and all of them
taken together, are only necessary and not sufficient for estabUshing
effective security markets.