Over
the last decade and a half, the banking and financial systems of the developed countries have been undergoing rapid changes—mostly driven by deregulation, innovations in information technology and the globalization of markets.
Simultaneously, the pressure of competition compelled the banks to go all out
for achieving economies of scale and scope and improving their efficiency. This
has resulted in a wave of mergers and acquisitions in the banking and financial
sectors. The consolidation process was essentially aimed at maximizing
profitability, reducing cost inefficiency, increasing market power, and
exploiting scale and scope economies, and improving managerial efficiency.
However, there is very little literature supporting these assumptions. In fact,
the extent of exploitable scale and scope economies are reported to be smaller
than expected and often the increasing managerial efficiencies are considered doubtful
in large financial institutions. Indeed, there is a concern that the larger the
financial institutions, the lesser the customer orientation becomes. Mergers
and acquisitions are also feared as a source of diversion of the attention of
the businesses from small customers.
Thus, measurement of
efficiency improvement derived from the consolidation process continues to be
the most appealing field of research for the academia. Driven by it, the
authors, Bernardo Maggi and Stefania P S Rossi have investigated the efficiency
of European and US commercial banks and presented their findings in the
article—“Does Banking Consolidation Lead to Efficiency Gains? Evidence from
Large Commercial Banks in Europe and US”. The authors have derived the scale
and scope economies indicators and measurement of X-efficiency from three cost
functions, namely—Fourier flexible form, translog and Box-Cox, and thus ensured
the stability and the robustness of the evidence across the different
specifications. The findings revealed that overall the largest banks do not
have higher efficiency scores. The authors opine that further enlargement of
the production size does not necessarily lead to production gains. However,
there is an interesting feature in their findings: The scale and scope
economies are larger in the US than in the European banks, probably because of
higher level of technology used by the US banks and perhaps the longer period
for which the restructured process is on. The authors, based on their findings,
have also opined that banks should focus more on cost efficiency than on
enlarging the scale of production.
There is another
interesting article—“An Analysis of Technical Progress and Efficiency in
Malaysian Commercial Banks Before Mergers”—by Shazali Abu Mansor, Alias Radam
and Muzafar Shah Habibullah, which studies the efficiency of 37 commercial
banks in Malaysia. The authors have measured the Total Factor Productivity and
its efficiency components for 37 commercial banks during the period of 1988-93
using a non-parametric Data Envelope Analysis. It was found that almost all the
productivity growth came from efficiency change rather than improvement in
technology, which means that efficiency gains and losses across the system were
found to be mostly mutually offsetting and efficiency change did not have a
significant impact on overall Total Factor Productivity.
Incidentally, these two
articles have a relevance to the Indian banking system, which, having reformed
itself, is on the move towards consolidation. As the authors of the second
article—Shazali Abu Mansor, Alias Radam and Muzafar Shah Habibullah—opined, the
findings of these two articles have many policy implications: Improving
managerial performance by identifying ‘best practices’ and ‘worst practices’
associated with high and low measured efficiencies; assessing the effects of
deregulation, merger and market structure on efficiency, etc.
In the next article—“Determinants of
Liquidity and Interest Rates: Some Results for India during 1995-2005”—the
authors, Ajay Pathak and Subhasis Ray, have attempted to find out the possible
determinants of liquidity and interest rate behavior in the Indian market. The
authors have first undertaken data requirement analysis followed by
determination of analysis technique for understanding the relationship between
liquidity and interest rates, if any, and the underlying determinants. The
study revealed that liquidity can be explained by exchange rate, inflation,
foreign exchange reserves, bank credit and government borrowing. But liquidity
has failed to significantly explain variation in the interest rate. The
simultaneous equation model revealed that exchange rate, inflation and foreign
exchange reserves have a dominant effect on interest rate behavior. The authors
also believe that non-quantifiable factors such as government policies,
improvement in living standards of the people, monetary policy and market
sentiment do have an impact both on the liquidity and interest rate behavior.
This study thus throws open a wide scope for further research in verifying the
influence of quantifiable and non-quantifiable factors on the interest rate
behavior.
The Muhammad Yunus-led
‘micro finance’ is by now well established in Africa, Latin America, Asia, and
Eastern Europe. Micro finance essentially involves granting loans under joint
liability to individuals who have no wealth but formed into groups to pursue an
economic activity. Such joint liability lending enables the lender to cut off
all the members of a group from future credit if any one member in the group
has not repaid the loan. It is expected that joint liability induces borrowers
of similar nature and value system to form into a group and avail loans.
Empirical studies reveal that these ‘wealth-less’ borrowers have achieved a fair
degree of success in terms of repaying the loans and building up their
financial sufficiency. In this context, the author, Alessandro Fedele, in his
article—“Joint Liability Lending in Microcredit Markets with Adverse Selection:
A Survey”—has found that due to peer selection mechanism, safe borrowers select
the contract with higher joint liability and lower interest rates and as a
consequence the welfare impact and repayment rate rise more under joint
liability than under conventional individual liability.
Courtesy: IJBM Vol 5 No 2.
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