Foreign Investments and Developing Countries - Macedonia as a Case Study - VIII
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Foreign Investments and Developing Countries - Macedonia as a Case
Study - Part VIII
A dialog with Nikola Gruevski, former Minister of Trade and Finance
of the Republic of Macedonia
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
Nikola: A second big problem for the entry of foreign capital, is
that in the current Foreign Exchange Working Law (Official newspaper
of RM No 30/93) a specific possibility for the entry of foreign
currency into Macedonia for the purposes of buying securities is not
foreseen.
In article 90, item 3 of the above mentioned Law, it is predicated
that a domestic party, on the basis of a foreign exchange deposit of
a foreign depositor, may keep foreign exchange on a foreign exchange
account in an authorized bank for working abroad, if said party has
contracted to keep the foreign exchange in the foreign exchange
account, or to use it for purposes consolidated in the deposit
agreement.
In 1993, when this law was passed, there was no stock exchange in
Macedonia, but after its inauguration, and after the passing of a
law which stated that any trade in securities must be conducted
through the stock exchange (article 186 of the Law for Issuing and
Trading Securities), no one in Macedonia found a reason (nor wanted
to find one) to amend this Law.
A lot of illogical situations regarding foreign capital are to be
found in the chapter dealing with the purchase of securities and
titled "Frozen Savings", - facts which are contrary to the
statements of Macedonia that there is a great need and great wish to
attract foreign capital.
These problems are regulated with the Manual for the Means and
Procedures for using the Deposits of Foreign Exchange which belongs
to the citizens for buying shares and portions of Companies with
Social Capital (Official newspaper of RM No 7/95).
This manual constituted a permit to use the deposited foreign
currencies which belonged to the citizens, for the purposes of
buying shares and portions of companies in transformation. This was
allowed only to domestic or foreign individuals who are buying
shares or portions of these companies. Because the serious foreign
investors are legal entities (although exceptions do occur), in
practice this Manual meant that insiders in the companies
(called: "The Management Team", the establishment) who were in
control of the management could buy the company at a 35%-45%
discount, through the so called "frozen foreign exchange" and buy
stock companies according to the Law. If any foreign company wanted
to buy the same company through the Agency for Privatization it
would have had to pay in cash without such a discount. This deprived
the legal companies of their right to have received an equal
discount of 40% of the price they should have paid for the
Macedonian non-privatized social enterprises. And this is when
Agency for Privatization and the government of Macedonia were
proclaiming that they would gladly sell to a foreign investor, but
such an investor is nowhere to be found.
Sam: I do not need to protect my reputation as a severe critic of
the way that the privatization was handled. I just, again, would
like to put things in perspective. The same gimmicks - and worse -
were employed by virtually all the nomenclatures throughout the
former socialist block. National wealth was plundered not only in
Macedonia. Foreign exchange restrictions which applied to purchase
and sale of securities were in existence as late as 1990 in Israel
and even in the USA some form of them existed until 1971. I suggest
not to be too harsh on yourselves. Cronyism, nepotism, corruption,
legal stupidity - are human traits, not confined to Macedonia. They
are typical of all the corners of the Earth inhabited by humans. To
my mind, the question is not what has been done wrong - because it
cannot be reversed. Any reversal now will damage Macedonia more than
any status quo. The future should interest us. The big guys finished
their lunch, let us enjoy the crumbs. There is no point in going
home hungry. This is why I appreciate your practical suggestions:
the elimination of these parts in the laws that make foreign
investments prohibitive and dangerous. Let us hope that the
incentive - that evidently existed - to keep them on the books has
waned.
Nikola: I did not mention the domestic legal entities on purpose,
because the largest part of the sale (privatization) of the social
enterprises in Macedonia, was made to domestic physical persons
(management teams and employees).
The stock exchange in Skopje is less and less transparent. You can
see the reports of the trade from time to time in only one
Macedonian newspaper.
The domestic investors can be informed about the operation on the
stock exchange only if they call the brokers and probably the stock
market on the phone. That is not a problem of the newspapers, but of
the stock exchange. The foreign investors can follow the happenings
on Telerate and sometimes on Reuters (without information regarding
the prices of the shares that can be bought with frozen foreign
currency) and the lack of a stock market index is discouraging them.
There are other possibilities for changing some existing systems in
Macedonia: changing the concept of the stock exchange, that is
introducing computer trading and/or new members of the stock
exchange, dealers, or specialists who will offer prices for selling
and buying at every moment (Law for Issuing and Trading Securities).
This would improve the liquidity of the stock exchange, and would
allow to create a kind of an index (better than none). This is a
subject that should be explained separately. Changing the stock
exchange model will give more efficient results, if it is followed
by changes in the laws that I mentioned.
Sam: The Macedonian Stock Exchange really deserves a separate
treatment. But I am afraid that changes that are merely technical or
technological in nature will not suffice to revive it. An index is
very important when there is liquidity. Liquidity is there when
shares are on offer. Shares are on offer when companies think that
they will benefit by listing. But in Macedonia, there are no
companies, there are only managers. They have very little incentive
to introduce new shareholders to their little kingdoms. Shareholders
ask questions, sometimes uncomfortable questions. So, very few
companies are listed. The dull supply attracted even duller demand,
lack of liquidity ensued and the market died. It was up to the
government to resuscitate this vital instrument. It could have
privatized through it, borrowed through it and it could have forced
the new class of shareholders to conduct trading through the stock
exchange. None of this happened. There was no political commitment
to the success of a stock exchange. There was no mass education
campaign, there was nothing to offer, there was too much paranoia
and hostility.
Nikola: The impression, to put it mildly, is that the indeterminate
strategic objective of the Macedonian legislation regarding foreign
investments is not coincidental. This can be seen in the following:
TAX LAWS
According to many domestic and foreign legal and economic
commentators, in this group of laws, the tax laws in Macedonia
regarding the taxation of capital, especially foreign capital, are
written as though they should not be understood. Unintelligible
would also mean ambiguous. It means that they can be
interpreted "either way", at whim, as it suits somebody in a given
moment.
One part the law states that in Macedonia every physical and legal
person, resident or not, is a taxpayer of the income tax, that is
the profit that will be realized on the territory on the republic,
and on another place (article 33 of the Law for the income tax) it
is stated that in the first 3 years, under certain circumstances,
the profit generated by the foreigner from invested funds is
exempted from tax.
The uncertainty about existing official secret gazettes as a
remainder from the communist period is increasing the confusion.
A repatriation of profit is encumbered by a 10% tax (article 33 of
the Income Tax Law) and article 26 of the same Law states that
potential investors who would like to invest in speculative deals
(short term buying and selling with profit) are de-stimulated. Under
current conditions, with a totally illiquid capital market - this is
pure masochism.
According to this article, capital gains from the sale of shares and
bonds (the capital generated by a sale minus the respective
liability or cost assumed during the purchase) that the taxpayer
held for a period of less than 12 months will be completely included
in the tax base. Long-term capital gains from the sale of shares and
bonds that the taxpayer owned for12 months or more, will be included
in the tax base in an amount equal to 50% of the difference between
the cost of purchase and the sale's income.
To think and act long-term, an investor needs security, something
that the foreign investors doesn't see in Macedonia (for now).
Without their risk capital there will be very little or no liquidity
at all on the stock exchange. No businessman is against quick
profit. The only difference between the investor and the speculator
is in how long they remain in the same market. The joke that the
investor is a speculator who did not succeed in his speculation is
very famous.
There are similar regulations in the laws of other countries. For
example, in Germany there is a deadline of 6 months, instead of 1
year in Macedonia. Not only is the deadline twice shorter, but the
fact that Germany is not as risky a state as Macedonia is crucial.
The speculators are essential in the markets with high uncertainty
and in the economies in transition. They are very important in this
phase of the economic cycle in Macedonia. In these circumstances
when long term investors are hard to attract, the speculators would
be a good temporary replacement, and the Macedonian tax law should
not stop it.
Sam: Speculators have two important functions. Firstly, they provide
liquidity to illiquid markets. They are like high risk bankers. They
stop the gap between conventional financing (mainly debt) and long
term financing (equity and multilateral lending). Additionally, they
help the markets generate a price mechanism. In other words,
speculators fix prices by taking into consideration all the
information, both publicly available and less available. The prices
fixed by speculators in themselves constitute important information:
corporate warnings, exciting announcements, major crises - the
speculators know it all and convey these data to us through the
prices that they trade in. Speculators also carry out invaluable
arbitrage transactions. They equate the prices of the same good,
commodity, or securities in two or more markets by buying (at a
rising price) in the cheaper market and selling (at a declining
price) in the more expensive one.
However, experience in tiny to small stock exchanges (example:
Vancouver, Tel-Aviv) teaches us that it is better to discourage
speculation as long as the market is thin and immature. In the
absence of transparency, sophistication, experience and, above all,
liquidity, speculation deteriorates very fast to market cornering,
stock manipulation and insider trading. This, in turn, leads to
major crashes and, ultimately, to long years of illiquidity. I,
therefore, do support the law. I think that it is reasonable, under
the circumstances. I know of no country in the world that does not
have similar provisions - a discrimination in the treatment of
capital gains in accordance with the length of the period of
holding. Some countries prefer not to levy capital gains at all - or
to treat capital gains as a regular income to all intents and
purposes. The former approach might be the best for Macedonia.
Israel has no capital gains tax applicable to traded securities. It
helped to turn the Tel-Aviv Stock Exchange from a puny, criminal
ridden, place to the vibrant, interesting small stock exchange that
it is today.
(continued)
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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