Export Credit Insurance and Guarantees
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Export Credit Insurance and Guarantees

A Practitioner's Guide

Z. Salcic

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eBook - ePub

Export Credit Insurance and Guarantees

A Practitioner's Guide

Z. Salcic

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About This Book

The first practitioner handbook on export credit insurance and guarantees, providing manufacturers, exporters, bankers, and lawyers with a much needed resource. The book contains descriptions and analyses of almost every type of export credit insurance and guarantee used in international trade with explanations about the risks inherent in each.

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Part I
Subject Matter, Parties and Risks

1

Subject Matter and Basic Terms

This book is about export credit insurance and guarantees provided by export credit agencies to exporters and banks to cover their export credit risks. An export credit risk arises when an exporter sells goods or services to a foreign buyer on credit terms or when a bank provides a loan to a foreign buyer for purchasing goods or services from a country of export. The purpose of export credit insurance and guarantees is to indemnify exporters and banks for losses incurred by non-payment of a credit by a foreign buyer. Export credit agencies are specialised institutions acting on behalf of a state and with the state’s financial support. They are different from private insurance companies that conduct their business on their own account and without state support.
The export credit insurance and guarantees are in this book called the ECA cover. The abbreviation ECA is used in this book instead of the term export credit agency.
The ECA business and the benefits of obtaining the ECA cover are important for manufacturers, exporters, bankers, lawyers and other professionals engaged in international trade. They are also important for small and medium-sized companies whose representatives sometimes believe that the ECA cover is available only to large manufacturers selling capital equipment with a large value and multinational banks involved in such transactions. As a matter of fact, the ECA cover is available to companies of all sizes.
The first ECAs were established in several European countries directly after World War I. Today ECAs conduct their business in numerous countries of export covering a significant part of credit risks in the international trade. The importance of providing the ECA cover has increased due to the economic globalisation and global economic crises in which creditors seek state protection for credit risks in their export transactions.
Importance of export credit insurance and guarantees for international trade
According to the statistic provided by the Berne Union, the leading international association for the export credit and investment insurance industry, the volume of export credits and foreign direct investments insured by the members of Berne Union was USD$1.8 trillion in 2012. This means that more than 10% of international trade was covered by this type of insurance.

1.1 About the book

The book contains practical knowledge about the requirements for issuing the export credit insurance and guarantees, types of risks covered, types of policies available to exporters and banks, payment of claims, recovery procedures and the legal framework that governs this type of business. It is not about any particular export credit agency or country, but about common matters of providing the export credit insurance and guarantees globally. The book does not provide advice for any type of transaction and if a reader needs professional advice it should be always obtained from an expert.
The book consists of four parts, and each part consists of several chapters. The first part discusses ECAs, users of the ECA cover and the risks covered by ECAs. The second part is about two basic types of the ECA cover created to cover credit risks in commercial and loan transactions and other types of the ECA cover. The third part describes various procedures for obtaining the ECA cover, payment of claims by ECAs and recovery. Finally, the fourth part of the book discusses the legal framework that governs the ECA business.
The book is written as a practitioner’s guide for all participants in international trade, including manufacturers, exporters, bankers and foreign buyers that enter into international commercial and loan transactions. It is also written for lawyers and other professionals that advise contractual parties, draft documentation and assist them in other ways. The book will also help small and medium-sized manufacturers in selling their goods and services abroad.
The book is structured in a way that helps even the average reader understand the subject matter. However, it does not necessarily need to be read from the first to the last chapter. A reader may find that some parts of the book are more interesting and read the book in another convenient way. Some readers will already know some aspects of the ECA cover and may complete their knowledge by reading about other aspects. The readers that are not familiar with this subject matter may read the short explanations of basic terms and then read the chapters they find more interesting and easier to understand.
The book is written using the generally known economic and legal terms only. The specific export credit insurance terminology and sophisticated financial and insurance terms used by specialists in the ECA business are avoided. Where a specific export credit term is used it is always explained in a way the average reader can understand. The illustrations included in the book are simple in order to make understanding of the subject matter easier.

1.2 Basic terms

Participants in export credit transactions use a number of specific terms, some of them known from other financial and commercial transactions and some of them developed for the purpose of providing export credit insurance and guarantees. Below are short explanations of the basic terms frequently used in this book, provided to help facilitate readers’ understanding.

Credit

In the contractual context, ‘credit’ is defined as an agreement made between two parties by which some value is given by one party to another in exchange for a promise given by the other party to pay at a later date. Depending on the value given to the other party, credits may take two forms, the deferred payment of purchase price or the loan of money.
If a commercial contract for purchasing of goods or services provides payment of the contractual price at a later date, it is usually said that such a contract is entered on credit terms. The credit term constitutes a part of a commercial contract that normally contains several other terms. In loan contracts, where a lender provides a loan to a borrower in exchange for the borrower’s promise to repay the loan at a later date, the credit is a basic contractual term.
Payment on credit terms is typical in commercial contracts but the contractual parties may agree on other ways of payment of the contractual price. Such payment can be made simultaneously with delivery of goods or services, usually called the payment on delivery. Some contracts provide advance payment where the buyer pays the contractual price to the seller in advance for a promise given by the seller to deliver goods or services at a later date.
Payment on delivery and advanced payments are not analysed in this book.

Export credit

Where a buyer of goods or services purchased on credit terms is from a country other than the supplier’s country, such a credit is called the export credit. In the ECA context, the export credit agreed in a commercial contract is called the supplier credit.
The term ‘export credit’ includes a loan provided by a bank to a foreign buyer for purchasing goods or services from a country of export. In the ECA context, the export credit agreed in a loan agreement is called the buyer credit.

Export credit risk

The export credit risk is the risk that a credit will not be paid by a foreign buyer when due. Credit risks exist even in domestic credit transactions, but export credit risks are usually more complex than domestic credit risks. When the term ‘credit risk’ is used in this book, it always means export credit risk.

Exporter

In this book, the term ‘exporter’ is defined as a seller or supplier of goods or services supplied to a foreign buyer on credit terms. The exporter and foreign buyer may enter into various types of commercial contracts such as the contract on sale of goods or services, lease, construction, engineering and other contracts. The term ‘exporter’ emphasises the international character of export transactions that distinguishes them from domestic transactions. This book uses the term ‘exporter’ to mean a company, not an individual.
In this book the term ‘exporter’ is frequently used with the term ‘bank’, especially in the expression ‘the insured exporter or bank’, which describes them as creditors whose export credit risks are covered by export credit agencies.

Bank

In this book, the term ‘bank’ is used to mean a financial institution or other lender from a country of export or from a third country that provides a loan to a foreign buyer for purchasing goods or services from a country of export. When borrowing money from a bank, the foreign buyer acts in the capacity of borrower; however, the term ‘foreign buyer’ is used even in the loan context in order to emphasise the international character of a loan transaction and its connection with the commercial contract between the exporter and foreign buyer.

Foreign buyer

In this book, ‘foreign buyer’ has two meanings. In the first meaning, it is defined as a buyer of goods or services from a country different from the exporter’s country. The second meaning defines ‘foreign buyer’ as a borrower from a country different from the bank’s and exporter’s country. A foreign buyer may borrow an amount of money from a bank to purchase goods or services from an exporter. In this book, the term ‘foreign buyer’ is used to mean a legal entity, not an individual.
ECAs differentiate between three categories of foreign buyers: sovereign, public and private. A sovereign buyer is a foreign state, government, ministry or other institution that can validly bind a state. The main characteristic of a sovereign buyer is that a state cannot be liquidated in a bankruptcy proceeding despite being unable to pay its debts. A public buyer is usually a company owned or controlled wholly or in majority by a state or government. Such companies can be declared bankrupt and liquidated in a bankruptcy procedure. The public buyer cannot validly bind the state as its owner but it may receive financial support from the state. A private buyer is neither a sovereign nor a public buyer. Private foreign buyers are legal entities, usually organised and registered as companies in a country of import, and they are by far the largest group of foreign buyers with which export credit agencies deal.

Political and commercial events

The events that may cause non-payment of a credit by a foreign buyer can be of a political or commercial nature. Political events are normally out of the control of exporters, banks and foreign buyers. Commercial events affect the business of a foreign buyer, causing an inability to pay a credit. These events are usually called political and commercial risks.

Export credit insurance and export credit guarantees

In this book, the terms ‘export credit insurance’ and ‘export credit guarantees’ are defined as transactions by which export credit agencies insure export credit risks assumed by exporters or banks in their commercial or loan transactions with foreign buyers. Insurance and guarantees are similar transactions because both are used to transfer export credit risks from exporters or banks to export credit agencies. In return for providing export credit insurance or guarantees, export credit agencies charge a premium. An exporter or bank that has obtained export credit insurance or a guarantee from an ECA is called the insured.

ECA cover

In this book, the term ‘ECA cover’ is used for both export credit insurance and export credit guarantees.
Classification of a transaction as an export credit insurance or an export credit guarantee depends on the governing law of the transaction, but the terms of these transactions are similar and the transactions achieve the same economic effect. An export credit guarantee issued by an ECA in one country can be classified as an insurance contract in another and vice versa. In ordinary language both export credit insurance and export credit guarantees are called the export credit cover or the ECA cover, which is the term used in this book.

Export credit agency – ECA

An export credit agency (ECA) is a specialised institution that provides the ECA cover to exporters and banks. In providing the ECA cover, ECAs act on behalf of and with the financial support of their states. Therefore the state will compensate the loss incurred by an ECA in providing the ECA cover. The organisation and status of ECAs vary from country to country and they can be organised as a specialised bank, financial company, or insurance company acting on behalf of a state or an agency of state. The ECAs that are organised as banks or financial companies are wholly or partly owned by the state while insurance companies are usually privately owned but have a state mandate to act in the capacity of ECA.

Commercial or loan contract

In this book, the term ‘commercial or loan contract’ is defined as a contract in which the foreign buyer’s payment obligation is agreed on credit terms and for which the ECA cover is issued. A commercial contract is entered into between an exporter and foreign buyer and a loan between a bank and a foreign buyer.

Claim and indemnification

The claim is a request for payment of indemnification made by an insured exporter or bank to an ECA. This book defines the term ‘indemnification’ as the payment made by an ECA to compensate for a loss caused to the insured exporter or bank by non-payment of credit by a foreign buyer.

Official support

Official support means providing the ECA cover with the financial support of a state. This means the risk of non-payment of export credit covered by an ECA is assumed by the state.

The Arrangement (Consensus)

The most important international document that regulates the provision of the ECA cover is the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits. Several OECD countries, called the participating countries, adopted this document. The Arrangement does not have formal status in law but it is considered binding by the participating countries, which are: Australia, Canada, the European Community (including all EU member states), Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland and the United States.

Premium

In this book, the term ‘premium’ is defined as a fee charged by ECAs for issuing the ECA cover for the risk of non-payment of credi...

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