« 6th Seoul International Competition Forum | Main | Pricing Payment Cards »
September 7, 2010
Competition, Efficiency, and Soundness in Banking: An Industrial Organization Perspective
Posted by D. Daniel Sokol
Klaus Schaeck (Bangor Business School) and Martin Cihák (IMF) explore Competition, Efficiency, and Soundness in Banking: An Industrial Organization Perspective.
ABSTRACT: How can competition enhance bank soundness? Does competition improve soundness via the efficiency channel? Do banks heterogeneously respond to competition? To answer these questions, we exploit an innovative measure of competition [Boone, J., A new way to measure competition, EconJnl, Vol. 118, pp. 1245-1261] that captures the reallocation of profits from inefficient banks to their efficient counterparts. Based on two complementary datasets for Europe and the U.S., we first establish that the new competition indicator captures a broad variety of other characteristics of competition in a consistent manner. Second, we verify that competition increases efficiency. Third, we present novel evidence that efficiency is the conduit through which competition contributes to bank soundness. In a final examination of banks’ heterogeneous responses to competition, we find that smaller banks’ soundness measures respond m! ore strongly to competition than larger banks’ soundness measures, and two-stage quantile regressions indicate that the soundness-enhancing effect of competition is larger in magnitude for sound banks than for fragile banks.
September 7, 2010 | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef0133f3539ab0970b
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Competition, Efficiency, and Soundness in Banking: An Industrial Organization Perspective:
