Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1032515 Omega 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Benchmarking sixteen foreign banks against thirty-two domestic banks after reforms in China.•Divisional and between-period interactions are reflected in efficiency estimates.•Interest-bearing operations and non-interest operations are linked by number of referrals.•Undesirable outputs are treated as carry-overs that impact efficiency of following periods.•Robustness examines dimensionality, stability and sensitivity to weights and returns-to-scale.

The main motivation of this article is to illustrate dynamic network data envelopment analysis (DN-DEA) in commercial banking with emphasis on testing robustness. To this end, sixteen foreign banks in China are benchmarked against thirty-two domestic banks for the post-2007 period that follows major reforms. When network and dynamic dimensions are brought together, a more comprehensive analysis of the period 2008–2010 is enabled where divisional and between-period interactions are reflected in efficiency estimates. Weighted, variable returns-to-scale, non-oriented dynamic network slacks-based measure is used within the framework of the intermediation approach to bank behavior. A bank network (i.e., a decision-making unit, DMU) is conceptualized as comprised of two divisions or sub-DMUs, namely, interest-bearing operations and non-interest operations linked by number of referrals. Undesirable outputs from sub-DMUs 1 and 2 (non-performing loans, and proportion of fruitless referrals, respectively) are treated as carry-overs that impact the efficiency of the following periods. Under robustness testing, the illustrative application discusses discrimination by efficiency estimates, dimensionality of the performance model, stability of estimates through re-sampling (leave-one-out method), and sensitivity of results to divisional weights and returns-to-scale assumptions. The results based on Chinese commercial banks are illustrative in nature because of simulated data used on two of the variables.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Strategy and Management
Authors
,