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THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM AND ITS ROLE IN THE ECONOMY


                       BACHELOR OF COMMERCE LECTURE I



                         ARIEMBA JARED MOGAKA
                   SOUTH EASTERN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
                     (A CONSTITUENT COLLEGE OF THE
                         UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI)




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
The Financial System

 A financial system is the connected universe of
   financial instruments, financial institutions, and
   financial markets operating in a given place at a
   given time, that is, it is the financial superstructure
   of the economy.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The     financial system consists of all financial
   intermediaries and financial markets and their
   relations with respect to the flow of funds to and
   from households, governments, business firms, and
   foreigners, as well as the financial infrastructure.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The financial system is the totality of the players that
  facilitate the flow of funds from and to different
  players in the economy.
 Therefore, those with excess funds are able to find a
  mechanism within the financial system to channel
  their funds to those in deficit.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Therefore, the financial system allocates funds from
  surplus economic units to deficient economic units
  within the economy.
 In playing the above allocation function, the
  financial sector is able to reduce information and
  transaction costs, and facilitate the trading,
  diversification, and management of risk.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
Constituents of the financial system


 A financial system consists of banks, insurance
   companies, mutual funds and other institutions such
   as, non-bank financial institutions, which promote
   and mobilise savings and make the same available to
   actual investors.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The financial institutions are the intermediaries
  between the surplus economic units and the deficit
  economic units: they mobilize savings from surplus
  units and provide credit to the deficit units.
 The    financial instituions generate financial
  instruments which are then traded in the financial
  markets. The financial markets therefore provide a
  platform for the trading of the instruments.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The markets can be classified as either money
  markets or capital markets.
 The money markets deal with instruments of a short-
  term maturity period while capital markets mobilize
  savings into instruments of a long term maturity
  period.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The      markets can also be either primary or
     secondary. Primary markets provide an avenue for
     listing of new securities hence mobilizing more
     savings while secondary markets provide a forum
     for the trading of the already listed securities hence
     promoting the liquidity of the securities.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The financial securities are traded within the
  financial markets.
 Primary securities are issued to the ultimate savers
  by the ultimate investors for example ordinary
  shares and debentures. Secondary securities are
  issued to the ultimate savers as bank deposits, unit
  trusts, insurance policies etc.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The actual investors can be individual investors,
  industrial and trading companies and the
  government.
 It also includes other institutions, which actually act
  as alternative channels for investment of savings
  rather than promoters of savings. For instance, the
  new issue market and the stock exchanges which
  facilitate the buying and selling of shares and
  debentures of various companies.


ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The various regulatory agencies are a critical
   component of the financial system. They help
   promote financial stability and protect interests of
   consumers of financial services.
  The regulators also give direction to the financial
   sector by ensuring it is aligned to the needs of the
   economy.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
Role of the Financial System


 Financial systems play an important role in
  allocating scarce resources.
 They channel individual or household savings to the
  corporate sector, and allocate investment funds
  among companies.
 When companies make profits, the systems also help
  funnel some of the returns back to the individual
  savers.



ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Such a process will be very complex, highly
   inefficient, very expensive or practically impossible
   without a well developed financial system.
  Therefore, the main task of the financial system is
   to channel funds from sectors that have a surplus
   to sectors that have a shortage of funds.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 In doing so, the financial institutions performs two
   main functions, namely, reducing information and
   transaction costs, and facilitating the trading,
   diversification, and management of risk.
  Financial markets release information to aid the
   price-discovery process. They also provide a
   platform to trade and the relevant infrastructure to
   settle trades.



ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Individual entrepreneurs rarely have enough of
   their own capital to undertake investments
   themselves.
  Individual savers, without pooling their money,
   would not be able to take advantage of the
   potential increasing returns to scale of their
   investments, and would face a large degree of risk
   with little liquidity.



ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The financial system – including banks and other
     financial intermediaries, equity markets, and debt
     markets – solves these problems by agglomerating
     capital from many smaller savers, allocating capital
     to the most important uses, and monitoring to
     ensure that it is being used well.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Therefore, the financial system matches savers and
  investors.
 Although many people save, such as for retirement,
  and many have investment projects, such as building
  a factory or expanding the inventory carried by a
  family micro enterprise, it would be only by the
  wildest of coincidences that each investor saved
  exactly as much as needed to finance a given project.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Therefore, it is important that savers and investors
  somehow meet and agree on terms for loans or other
  forms of finance.
 This can occur without financial institutions; even in
  highly developed markets, many new entrepreneurs
  obtain a significant fraction of their initial funds
  from family and friends.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 However, the presence of banks, and later venture
  capitalists or stock markets, can greatly facilitate
  matching in an efficient manner.
 Small savers simply deposit their savings and let the
  bank decide where to invest them.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Financial systems increase the liquidity of assets. Some
   investments are very long-lived; in some cases - a
   hydroelectric plant, for example - such investments
   may last a century or more.
  Sooner or later, investors in such plants are likely to
   want to sell them.
  In some cases, it can be quite difficult to find a buyer at
   the time one wishes to sell - at retirement, for instance.
   Financial development increases liquidity by making it
   easier to sell, for example, on the stock market or to a
   syndicate of banks or insurance companies.
ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 The financial systems help in allocating credit
   efficiently. Channeling investment funds to uses
   yielding the highest rate of return.
  Well-functioning financial systems do a very good
   job of selecting the most productive recipients for
   these resources and ensuring that they are using
   them in high return activities.
  In contrast, poorly functioning financial systems
   often allocate capital in low-productivity
   investments. The differences in terms of growth
   and total factor productivity can be enormous.

ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 One of the most important functions of the
   financial system is to share risk and it is often
   argued that financial markets are well suited to
   achieve this aim.This is two-pronged:
  Insurance markets provide protection against risk;
   infact, this is the core mandate of the insurance
   industrty.
  Also, the financial markest allow for diversification
   possible in stock markets or in banks' loan
   syndications. All these help in risk management.

ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Another seemingly obvious but very important role
     is that financial systems generate and distribue alot
     of information. The acquisition and use of
     information to allocate resources efficiently is one
     of the most important functions of a financial
     system.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 In market-based systems, the large number of
     publicly listed firms, together with extensive
     disclosure requirements, means that a great deal of
     information about firms’ activities is released.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
Financial Intermediation

 Financial intermediation consists of “channeling
   funds between surplus and deficit agents”. A
   financial intermediary is a financial institution
   that connects surplus and deficit agents. The classic
   example of a financial intermediary is a bank that
   transforms bank deposits into bank loans.




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College
 Through the process of financial intermediation,
   certain assets or liabilities are transformed into
   different assets or liabilities.
  As such, financial intermediaries channel funds
   from people who have extra money (savers) to
   those who do not have enough money to carry out
   a desired activity (borrowers).




ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University
College

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The financial system

  • 1. THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM AND ITS ROLE IN THE ECONOMY BACHELOR OF COMMERCE LECTURE I ARIEMBA JARED MOGAKA SOUTH EASTERN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE (A CONSTITUENT COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI) ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 2. The Financial System  A financial system is the connected universe of financial instruments, financial institutions, and financial markets operating in a given place at a given time, that is, it is the financial superstructure of the economy. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 3.  The financial system consists of all financial intermediaries and financial markets and their relations with respect to the flow of funds to and from households, governments, business firms, and foreigners, as well as the financial infrastructure. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 4.  The financial system is the totality of the players that facilitate the flow of funds from and to different players in the economy.  Therefore, those with excess funds are able to find a mechanism within the financial system to channel their funds to those in deficit. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 5.  Therefore, the financial system allocates funds from surplus economic units to deficient economic units within the economy.  In playing the above allocation function, the financial sector is able to reduce information and transaction costs, and facilitate the trading, diversification, and management of risk. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 6. Constituents of the financial system  A financial system consists of banks, insurance companies, mutual funds and other institutions such as, non-bank financial institutions, which promote and mobilise savings and make the same available to actual investors. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 7.  The financial institutions are the intermediaries between the surplus economic units and the deficit economic units: they mobilize savings from surplus units and provide credit to the deficit units.  The financial instituions generate financial instruments which are then traded in the financial markets. The financial markets therefore provide a platform for the trading of the instruments. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 8.  The markets can be classified as either money markets or capital markets.  The money markets deal with instruments of a short- term maturity period while capital markets mobilize savings into instruments of a long term maturity period. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 9.  The markets can also be either primary or secondary. Primary markets provide an avenue for listing of new securities hence mobilizing more savings while secondary markets provide a forum for the trading of the already listed securities hence promoting the liquidity of the securities. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 10.  The financial securities are traded within the financial markets.  Primary securities are issued to the ultimate savers by the ultimate investors for example ordinary shares and debentures. Secondary securities are issued to the ultimate savers as bank deposits, unit trusts, insurance policies etc. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 11.  The actual investors can be individual investors, industrial and trading companies and the government.  It also includes other institutions, which actually act as alternative channels for investment of savings rather than promoters of savings. For instance, the new issue market and the stock exchanges which facilitate the buying and selling of shares and debentures of various companies. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 12.  The various regulatory agencies are a critical component of the financial system. They help promote financial stability and protect interests of consumers of financial services.  The regulators also give direction to the financial sector by ensuring it is aligned to the needs of the economy. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 13. Role of the Financial System  Financial systems play an important role in allocating scarce resources.  They channel individual or household savings to the corporate sector, and allocate investment funds among companies.  When companies make profits, the systems also help funnel some of the returns back to the individual savers. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 14.  Such a process will be very complex, highly inefficient, very expensive or practically impossible without a well developed financial system.  Therefore, the main task of the financial system is to channel funds from sectors that have a surplus to sectors that have a shortage of funds. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 15.  In doing so, the financial institutions performs two main functions, namely, reducing information and transaction costs, and facilitating the trading, diversification, and management of risk.  Financial markets release information to aid the price-discovery process. They also provide a platform to trade and the relevant infrastructure to settle trades. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 16.  Individual entrepreneurs rarely have enough of their own capital to undertake investments themselves.  Individual savers, without pooling their money, would not be able to take advantage of the potential increasing returns to scale of their investments, and would face a large degree of risk with little liquidity. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 17.  The financial system – including banks and other financial intermediaries, equity markets, and debt markets – solves these problems by agglomerating capital from many smaller savers, allocating capital to the most important uses, and monitoring to ensure that it is being used well. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 18.  Therefore, the financial system matches savers and investors.  Although many people save, such as for retirement, and many have investment projects, such as building a factory or expanding the inventory carried by a family micro enterprise, it would be only by the wildest of coincidences that each investor saved exactly as much as needed to finance a given project. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 19.  Therefore, it is important that savers and investors somehow meet and agree on terms for loans or other forms of finance.  This can occur without financial institutions; even in highly developed markets, many new entrepreneurs obtain a significant fraction of their initial funds from family and friends. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 20.  However, the presence of banks, and later venture capitalists or stock markets, can greatly facilitate matching in an efficient manner.  Small savers simply deposit their savings and let the bank decide where to invest them. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 21.  Financial systems increase the liquidity of assets. Some investments are very long-lived; in some cases - a hydroelectric plant, for example - such investments may last a century or more.  Sooner or later, investors in such plants are likely to want to sell them.  In some cases, it can be quite difficult to find a buyer at the time one wishes to sell - at retirement, for instance. Financial development increases liquidity by making it easier to sell, for example, on the stock market or to a syndicate of banks or insurance companies. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 22.  The financial systems help in allocating credit efficiently. Channeling investment funds to uses yielding the highest rate of return.  Well-functioning financial systems do a very good job of selecting the most productive recipients for these resources and ensuring that they are using them in high return activities.  In contrast, poorly functioning financial systems often allocate capital in low-productivity investments. The differences in terms of growth and total factor productivity can be enormous. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 23.  One of the most important functions of the financial system is to share risk and it is often argued that financial markets are well suited to achieve this aim.This is two-pronged:  Insurance markets provide protection against risk; infact, this is the core mandate of the insurance industrty.  Also, the financial markest allow for diversification possible in stock markets or in banks' loan syndications. All these help in risk management. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 24.  Another seemingly obvious but very important role is that financial systems generate and distribue alot of information. The acquisition and use of information to allocate resources efficiently is one of the most important functions of a financial system. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 25.  In market-based systems, the large number of publicly listed firms, together with extensive disclosure requirements, means that a great deal of information about firms’ activities is released. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 26. Financial Intermediation  Financial intermediation consists of “channeling funds between surplus and deficit agents”. A financial intermediary is a financial institution that connects surplus and deficit agents. The classic example of a financial intermediary is a bank that transforms bank deposits into bank loans. ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College
  • 27.  Through the process of financial intermediation, certain assets or liabilities are transformed into different assets or liabilities.  As such, financial intermediaries channel funds from people who have extra money (savers) to those who do not have enough money to carry out a desired activity (borrowers). ARIEMBA J. MOGAKA, South Eastern University College