Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
973072 The North American Journal of Economics and Finance 2016 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examine the productivity growth of Western European banks.•The gMMPI is split into various productivity change components.•Productivity growth arising from technical changes and scale effects.•Smaller and larger banks appear to grow faster.•Conservative banks tend to grow at a rapid rate.

Insofar as the completion of the Single Market for Financial Services, it has presented new challenges for European Banking industries. In this study, we use a recently developed generalized metafrontier Malmquist productivity index (gMMPI) to provide insights on productivity growth. We extend the gMMPI to broaden the index's capacity by decomposing various sources of productivity change in the metafrontier context. The sample contains commercial banks from 12 Western European countries prior to the recent financial crisis. A key advantage of our extension is that it introduces the role of scale effects. The empirical results show that an average bank's productivity growth arises mainly from technical changes and scale effects. Moreover, smaller and larger banks grow faster than medium ones. In addition, conservative banks tend to grow faster. These findings suggest that a more competitive and integrated financial market induced by financial deregulation is indeed able to improve banks’ productivity.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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