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Hometown Investment Trust Funds [electronic resource] : A Stable Way to Supply Risk Capital / edited by Naoyuki Yoshino, Sahoko Kaji.

Contributor(s): Yoshino, Naoyuki [editor.] | Kaji, Sahoko [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Tokyo : Springer Japan : Imprint: Springer, 2013Description: IX, 98 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9784431543091.Subject(s): Entrepreneurship | Business ethics | Finance | Macroeconomics | Public finance | Economics | Public Economics | Finance, general | Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics | Entrepreneurship | Business EthicsAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 336 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Ch1 The Background of Hometown Investment Trust Funds (Naoyuki Yoshino) -- Ch2 Supply of Risk Capital for Regional Development in Japan (Atsuo Akai) -- Ch3 Hometown Investment Trust Funds in Japan (Masami Komatsu) -- Ch4 Hometown Investment Trust Funds for Regional Development (Norifumi Sugimoto) -- Ch5 HIT as a Form of Microfi nance in Asia (Yuka Morita) -- Ch6 Concluding Remarks and the Way Forward (Shuhei Shiozawa).
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book records the first success stories of a new form of financial intermediation, the hometown investment fund, that has become a national strategy in Japan, partly to meet the need to finance small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) after the devastating earthquake and tsunami in March 2011. The hometown investment fund has three main advantages. First, it contributes to financial market stability by lowering information asymmetry. Individual households and firms have direct access to information about the borrowing firms, mainly SMEs, that they lend to. Second, it is a stable source of risk capital. The fund is project driven. Firms and households decide to invest by getting to know the borrowers and their projects. In this way the fund distributes risk but not so that it renders risk intractable, which was the problem with the "originate and distribute" model. Third, it contributes to economic recovery by connecting firms and households with SMEs that are worthy of their support. It also creates employment opportunities, at the SMEs as well as for the pool of retirees from financial institutions who can help assess the projects. Introduction of the hometown investment fund has huge global implications. The world is seeking a method of financial intermediation that minimizes information asymmetry, distributes risk without making it opaque, and contributes to economic recovery. Funds similar to Japan's hometown investment fund can succeed in all three ways. After all, the majority of the world's businesses are SMEs. The first chapter explains the theory behind this method, and the following chapters relate success stories from Japan and other parts of Asia. This book should encourage policymakers, economists, lenders, and borrowers, especially in developing countries, to adopt this new form of financial intermediation, thus contributing to global economic stability.
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Ch1 The Background of Hometown Investment Trust Funds (Naoyuki Yoshino) -- Ch2 Supply of Risk Capital for Regional Development in Japan (Atsuo Akai) -- Ch3 Hometown Investment Trust Funds in Japan (Masami Komatsu) -- Ch4 Hometown Investment Trust Funds for Regional Development (Norifumi Sugimoto) -- Ch5 HIT as a Form of Microfi nance in Asia (Yuka Morita) -- Ch6 Concluding Remarks and the Way Forward (Shuhei Shiozawa).

This book records the first success stories of a new form of financial intermediation, the hometown investment fund, that has become a national strategy in Japan, partly to meet the need to finance small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) after the devastating earthquake and tsunami in March 2011. The hometown investment fund has three main advantages. First, it contributes to financial market stability by lowering information asymmetry. Individual households and firms have direct access to information about the borrowing firms, mainly SMEs, that they lend to. Second, it is a stable source of risk capital. The fund is project driven. Firms and households decide to invest by getting to know the borrowers and their projects. In this way the fund distributes risk but not so that it renders risk intractable, which was the problem with the "originate and distribute" model. Third, it contributes to economic recovery by connecting firms and households with SMEs that are worthy of their support. It also creates employment opportunities, at the SMEs as well as for the pool of retirees from financial institutions who can help assess the projects. Introduction of the hometown investment fund has huge global implications. The world is seeking a method of financial intermediation that minimizes information asymmetry, distributes risk without making it opaque, and contributes to economic recovery. Funds similar to Japan's hometown investment fund can succeed in all three ways. After all, the majority of the world's businesses are SMEs. The first chapter explains the theory behind this method, and the following chapters relate success stories from Japan and other parts of Asia. This book should encourage policymakers, economists, lenders, and borrowers, especially in developing countries, to adopt this new form of financial intermediation, thus contributing to global economic stability.

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