Abstract

This paper summarizes and discusses the results of a survey on country practices in the management of sovereign assets and liabilities. Twenty-eight countries, mostly high-income economies, responded to the questionnaire. The survey responses provide detailed information about various approaches to the sovereign asset and liability management framework in terms of balance sheet production as well as objectives, priority areas, and challenges associated with integrated management. In addition to the survey results, where possible and relevant, this paper provides insight through prominent country examples. The survey results confirm that the number of countries that have developed such a framework is limited. Although most of the respondents indicated that they regularly produce an accounting balance sheet, the objective of this exercise is often limited to monitoring sovereign assets and liabilities rather than determining mismatches between them. In the cases where a sovereign asset and liability management framework is implemented, there are significant differences across countries. Most countries include state-owned enterprises in the sovereign balance sheet, but only a minority also considers central banks, in some cases only international reserves and sovereign funds. The challenges cited include institutional arrangements, uncertain or lacking mandate, coordination between institutions, data availability, and valuation of assets. Most of these challenges are related to the implementation of the approach. The development of sound practices for sovereign asset and liability management could benefit governments and facilitate the implementation of a holistic approach to manage their balance sheets and related risks, increasing their resilience to shocks.

Highlights

  • The sovereign asset and liability management (SALM) approach aims at providing a strategic framework to manage both sides of the sovereign balance sheet

  • A key element of this approach is to overcome the management of assets and liabilities of the public sector at a sub portfolio level where individual entities are responsible for their own financial stocks and flows without considering the impact they have on the rest of the sovereign balance sheet

  • It is widely accepted that joint evaluation of risks and gains for assets and liabilities allows balance sheet managers to manage their risk in a costefficient way or to benefit from higher returns by utilizing natural hedges

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Summary

Coskun Cangoz Sebastien Boitreaud Christopher Dychala1

M. Coskun Cangoz (Manager, Financial Advisory and Banking-Debt Management), Sebastien Boitreaud (Lead Financial Officer, Financial Advisory and Banking-Debt Management) and Christopher Dychala (Analyst, Financial Advisory and Banking-Banking Products) are from the World Bank Treasury

Introduction
Balance Sheet Approach - Joint Management of Assets and Liabilities
Sovereign balance sheet
Rationale for the sovereign balance sheet
Coverage of Balance Sheet
Assets and liabilities included on the sovereign balance sheet
Main issues related to the production of the sovereign balance sheet
Framework to manage sovereign assets and liabilities
Risk management framework for assets and liabilities
Integration of asset and liability management considerations
Integrated framework for sovereign ALM
Governance arrangements supporting sovereign ALM
Challenges and priorities of debt managers for sovereign ALM
Data availability Measurement of assets
Conclusion
Sovereign financial assets and liabilities under management
Governance
Risk Management Framework - Risk Indicators and Risk Modeling
Reporting, Performance Evaluation and Accountability
Findings
Other information
Full Text
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