Secondary Privatisation in Transition Economies The Evolution of Enterprise Ownership in the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovenia Edited by Barbara Blaszczyk, Iraj Hoshi and Richard Woodward Secondary Privatisation in Transition Economies Also by !raj Hoshi Barriers to the Entry and Growth of New firms in Early Transition (with Ewa Balcerowicz and Leszek Balcerowicz) Enterprise Exit Processes in Transition Economies (with Leszek Balcerowicz, Cheryl W. Gray and Ewa Balcerowicz) Secondary Privatisation in Transition Economies The Evolution of Enterprise Ownership in the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovenia Edited by Barbara BYaszczyk Center for Social and Economic Research, Warsaw, Poland Iraj Hoshi Staffordshire University, Stoke on Trent, United Kingdom Richard Woodward Center for Social and Economic Research, Warsaw, Poland * Editorial matter and selection and Chapter 1 ©Barbara BtaS<:ayk, lraj Hoshi and Richard Woodward 2003. All remaining Chapters © Palgrave Macmillan 2003 Soficover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2003 978-1-349-51221-8 AU rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright licensing Agency, 90 Totten ham Court Road,london W1T 4LP. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be Hable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The authors have asserted their rights to be identified as the authors of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 2003 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN Hound mills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS and 175 Fifth Avenue, New York. N.Y. 10010 Companies and representatives throughout the world PALGRAVE MACMILLAN is the global academic imprint of the Palgrave Macmillan division of St. Martin's Press, LLC and of Palgrave Macmillan ltd. Macmi!!an® is a registered trademark in the United States, United Kingdom and other countries. Palgrave is a registered trademark in the European Union and other countries. ISBN 978-1-349-51221-8 ISBN 978-0-230-37701-1 (eBook) 00110.105719780230377011 This book Is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Se<ondary privatization in transition economies: the evolution of enter prise ownership in the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovenia I edited by Barbara Blaszczyk, !raj Hoshi, Richard Woodward.--1 st ed. p.cm. lndudes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4039-1537-7 l. Privatization--Poland. 2. Poland--Economic pollcy--1900- 3. Privatization--Czech Republic. 4. Czech Republic--Economic policy. 5. Privatization--SlOV1!nia. 6. Slovenia--Economic policy. l. Blaszczyk, Barbara. II. Hoshi, !raj, 1944-Ill. Woodward, Richard. HD4215.7.S43 2003 338.943'05--dc21 2003046943 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Contents List ofF igures ...................................................................................................... vii List of Tables ....................................................................................................... viii Preface ................................................................................................................ xiii Contributors ......................................................................................................... xv 1. Ownership and Performance in Transition Economies: An Overview Barbara Blaszczyk, !raj Hoshi, Evien Kocenda, Richard Woodward .................... ! 1.1 Introduction ............................................................................................ 1 1.2 Privatisation and enterprise performance: Theory and evidence ............ 5 1.3 Overview of the book ........................................................................... 12 2. Slovenia: Ownership and Performance of Mass-Privatised Firms Marko Simoneti, Andreja Bohm, Marko Rems, Matija Rojec, Joie P. Damijan, Boris Majcen .................................................................................................................. 23 2.1 Introduction .......................................................................................... 23 2.2 Barriers to secondary privatisation in Slovenia .................................... 25 2.3 Evolution in ownership structure and concentration after mass privatisation ......................................................................................... 44 2.4 Company performance and ownership changes after mass privatisation (1995-99) ............................................................................................. 61 2.5 Conclusions .......................................................................................... 78 3. Poland 1: Ownership and Performance of Firms Privatised by Management-Employee Buyouts Piotr Kozarzewski, Richard Woodward ••.... 91 3.1 Introduction .......................................................................................... 91 3.2 The evolution of ownership structures .................................................. 92 3.3 Factors in the post-privatisation evolution of ownership structure ....... 98 3.4 The economic performance of employee-leased companies ............... 103 3.5 Corporate governance ......................................................................... 108 3.6 Conclusions ........................................................................................ 114 Appendix ........................................................................................................ 117 4. Poland II: Ownership and Performance of the National Investment Funds and their Portfolio Companies Barbara Blaszczyk, Michal G6rzyfzski, Tytus Kaminski, Bartlomiej Pacz6ski ........................................................................... 123 4.1 Introduction ........................................................................................ 123 v vi Contents 4.2 The institutional and legal framework of the NIF Programme and the initial ownership structure of the National Investment Funds ............ 124 4.3 The changes of ownership structure of the NIFs ................................ l27 4.4 Management of the National Investment Funds: Main issues ............ 133 4.5 The privatisation policies of the funds and the resulting ownership structures of the portfolio companies ................................................. 142 4.6 The economic performance ofNIF companies ................................... 147 4.7 Summary and conclusions .................................................................. 160 5. Tbe Czech Republic: Ownership and Performance ofVoucber-Privatised Firms Evien Kocenda, Jura} Valachy ............................................................... 171 5.1 Privatisation in the Czech Republic: The setting for ownership structures ........................................................................................... 171 5.2 Changes in ownership structure and the performance ofvoucher- privatised firms .................................................................................. 176 5.3 Concluding comments ........................................................................ 205 Appendix ........................................................................................................ 207 6. Mass Privatisation and Endogenous Ownership Structure Irena Grosfeld, !raj Hoshi ........................................................................................................... 215 6.1 Introduction ........................................................................................ 215 6.2 Ownership structure and firm performance: Ambiguous relationship 217 6.3 Wholesale privatisation and after: Reallocation of equity holdings in the Czech Republic and Poland ............................................................... 221 6.4 Changes in ownership structure since the initial wholesale privatisation ........................................................................................................... 227 6.5 Determinants of ownership: The expected relationship ...................... 235 6.6 Econometric specification .................................................................. 237 6. 7 Conclusions ........................................................................................ 241 Appendix ........................................................................................................ 242 7. Secondary Privatisation: Summary and Lessons Learned Barbara Blaszczyk, !raj Hoshi, Richard Woodward. ........................................................ 249 7.1 Slovenia .............................................................................................. 249 7.2 Poland ................................................................................................ 251 7.3 The Czech Republic ........................................................................... 254 7.4 Endogenous ownership structure ........................................................ 255 7.5 Conclusions ........................................................................................ 256 Index .................................................................................................................. 265 List of Figures Figure 2.1. The number of shareholders and ownership concentration at the time of completion of privatisation ......................................................... 48 Figure 2.2. The stake of the largest owner (C1) from the smallest to the largest at the time of completed privatisation and the end of 1999 ............ 53 Figure 2.3. The stakes of five largest owners (C5) from the smallest to the largest at time of completed privatisation and the end of 1999 ....... 55 Figure 4.1. The ownership share oflarge foreign investors in NIFs ............... 128 Figure4.2. The Scheme of Corporate Governance of the NIFs ...................... 136 Figure4.3. Management firms' global fees through the year 2000 and the average yearly price capitalisation of the funds in the year 2000.141 Figure 5.1. Density functions of concentration indexes for firms involved in voucher privatisation .................................................................... 182 Figure 5.2. Density functions of concentration indexes for firms not involved in voucher privatisation .................................................................... 186 Figure 5.3. Densities of ownership concentration by category of single largest owner (C1 ) .................................................................................... 207 Figure 5.4. Densities of ownership concentration by category of single largest owner (C1) .................................................................................... 210 vii List of Tables Table2.1. Initial ownership concentration in companies privatised as public (P), internal (I) and external (E) .................................................. 47 Table2.2. Ownership structures at time of completed privatisation ............ 49 Table 2.3. Changes in ownership concentration since completed privatisation through the end of 1999 in companies privatised as public (P), internal (I) and external (E) ......................................................... 52 Table 2.4. Ownership concentration at the end of 1999 in companies privatised as public (P), internal (I) and external (E) .................. 52 Table2.5. Changes in ownership structures from completion ofprivatisation to end of 1999 (%) ....................................................................... 57 Table2.6. Transformation matrix from completion of privatisation to the end of 1999 ........................................................................................ 59 Table2.7. Transformation matrix from completion ofprivatisation to the end of 1999 in percentage points; n=426 ........................................... 60 Table2.8. Changes in indicators of companies privatised as public (P), internal (N) and external (E), 1995-99, n = 426 .......................... 64 Table2.9. Changes in indicators of companies that operated as public (PP), internal (II) or external (EE) in the period 1995-99, n = 242 ...... 65 Table 2.10. Changes in indicators of companies that changed ownership type between 1995 and 1999 in secondary privatisation: PS, IS and ES companies, n= 184 ....................................................................... 66 Table 2.1 1. Changes in indicators of companies that were acquired by strategic investors between 1995 and 1999 in secondary privatisation, n=87 ...................................................................... 66 Table 2.12. Initial indicators of companies privatised as public (P), internal (I) and external (E), 1995, n = 426 ................................................... 68 Table 2.13. Evaluation of the selection mechanism in primary privatisation by multinomiallogit model (base group=internal privatisation; data for 1994) ...................................................................................... 69 Table2.14. Economic efficiency-TFP growth: Selection bias and the privatisation model effects (the combined effect of owners and sellers) ......................................................................................... 71 Table2.15. Economic efficiency- TFP growth: Owner effect vs. agent/seller effect ........................................................................................... 72 Table2.16. Economic efficiency-TFP growth: Owner effect vs. agent/seller effect separated for individual privatisation model ..................... 73 Table 2.17. Economic efficiency-TFP growth: Owner effect vs. seller effect separated for individual privatisation model, taking into account sales to strategic investors only ................................................... 74 Table2.18. Financial performance (EBITDA to sales ratio): The privatisation model effect (combined owner and seller effect) ........................ 76 viii ix ListofTables Table 2.19. Financial performance (EBITDA to sales ratio): Owner effect vs. seller effect .................................................................................. 77 Table 2.20. Financial performance (profit to sales ratio): Owner effect vs. seller effect .................................................................................. 7 8 Table 3.1. Ownership structure in the average employee-leased company immediately after privatisation (%) ............................................. 93 Table 3.2. Percentage of employee-leased companies dominated by various owner groups immediately following privatisation ..................... 93 Table 3.3. Ownership structure of employee-leased companies (weighted averages;%) ................................................................................ 94 Table 3.4. Ownership structure of employee-leased companies (simple averages; o/o) ................................................................................ 95 Table 3.5. Ownership structure dynamics in employee-leased companies, by major shareholder groups (weighted averages; %) ...................... 96 Table 3.6. Number of firms in which the given ownership groups had shares of at least 20% ............................................................................. 97 Table 3.7. Holdings of the single largest shareholder (weighted averages) .. 97 Table 3.8. Transformation matrix ................................................................. 99 Table 3.9. Evolution of ownership structure, by initial ownership structure of the companies (weighted averages; %) ...................................... 100 Table 3.10. Evolution of ownership structure, by sector (weighted averages; %) .............................................................................................. 101 Table 3.11. Evolution of ownership structure, by size of companies (%) ..... 101 Table 3.12. Evolution of ownership structure, by net loss vs. net profit (weighted averages;%) ............................................................. 102 Table 3.13. Gross profitability (ratio of gross profit or loss to total reve- nues) .......................................................................................... l04 Table 3.14. Average value of investment projects, per employee (in PLN) .104 Table3.15. Number of firms that obtained investment credit ...................... 105 Table 3.16. Average investment spending, 1993-1996 (in millions ofpre- 1995 zlotys) ............................................................................... l05 Table 3.17. Average end-of-year employment, by year ............................... 106 Table 3.18. Positive responses to new market expansion question, 1997- 1999 ........................................................................................... 107 Table 3.19. Positive responses to new market expansion question, 1997-1999 ................................................................................. 107 Table 3.20. ISO quality certification by ownership group, 1998 .................. 108 Table 3.21. Supervisory board composition in 1997-1999, by ownership structure (%) .............................................................................. 110 Table 3.22. The body that appoints the executive board, by ownership structure type (%) ...................................................................... 111 Table 3.23. Percentage of supervisory boards exercising given powers in 1998-1999 ................................................................................. 113 Table 3.24. Number of firms privati sed, by year(%) ................................... 117 Table 4.1. The initial shareholding structure of the NIF portfolio companies . .................................................................................................. 125