Search results for "Lerner index"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

The cost of market power in banking: Social welfare loss vs. cost inefficiency

2007

Abstract This paper analyses the relationship between market power in the loan and deposit markets and efficiency in the EU-15 countries over 1993–2002. Results show the existence of a positive relationship between market power and cost X-efficiency, allowing rejection of the so-called quiet life hypothesis [Berger, A.N., Hannan, T.H., 1998. The efficiency cost of market power in the banking industry: A test of the ‘quiet life’ and related hypotheses. Review of Economics and Statistics 8 (3), 454–465]. The social welfare loss attributable to market power in 2002 represented 0.54% of the GDP of the EU-15. Results show that the welfare gains associated with a reduction of market power are gre…

Economic efficiencyEconomics and EconometricsLabour economicsCost efficiencymedia_common.quotation_subjectSocial WelfareMonetary economicsLerner indexCompetition (economics)EconomicsMarket powerInefficiencyWelfareFinancemedia_commonJournal of Banking & Finance
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Cross-country comparisons of competition and pricing power in European banking

2009

Abstract Studies of banking competition and competitive behavior both within and across countries typically utilise only one of the few measures that are available. In trying to assess the relative competitive position of banking markets in 14 European countries, existing indicators of competition are found to give conflicting predictions across countries, within countries, and over time. This is because indicators of competition tend to measure different things and are additionally influenced by cross-country differences in cost efficiency, fee income levels, real economic growth and inflation. We attempt to separate bank pricing power from these embodied influences and derive more consist…

InflationEconomics and EconometricsCost efficiencybusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectInternational economicsMonetary economicsjel:D43Lerner indexjel:G21Competition (economics)OligopolyPower (social and political)Competition; bankingjel:L13EconomicsRetail bankingPosition (finance)businessFinancemedia_commonJournal of International Money and Finance
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Revisiting the quiet life hypothesis in banking using nonparametric techniques

2014

Early studies testing the quiet life hypothesis in banking found strong evidence that banks in more concentrated markets exhibit lower cost efficiency levels. More recent studies have reexamined the issue in different contexts, with mixed results. These approaches are based on stipulating a linear re- lationship between market power and efficiency in banking, which might be problematic, as suggested by the literature on efficiency analysis. We explore how bank cost efficiency measures are related to market power using flexible techniques, which are more consistent with those employed to measure efficiency in the first stage of the analysis. Our study focuses on the Spanish banking industry,…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsHF5001-6182bankingsavings bankBusiness modelLerner indexData envelopment analysisEconomicsEconometricsBusinessC14Market powerL50Cost efficiencybusiness.industryLerner indexmarket powerNonparametric statisticsC61efficiencyData Envelopment Analysisnonparametric regressionefficiencyRetail bankingBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)G21Allocative efficiencybusiness
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Factors explaining the interest margin in the banking sectors of the European Union

2003

Abstract This study analyses the interest margin in the principal European banking sectors (Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Spain) in the period 1993–2000 using a panel of 15,888 observations, identifying the fundamental elements affecting this margin. Our starting point is the methodology developed in the original study by Ho and Saunders [Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis XVI (1981) 581–600] and later extensions, but widened to take banks' operating costs explicitly into account. Also, unlike the usual practice in the literature, a direct measure of the degree of competition (Lerner index) in the different markets is used. The results show that the fall of marg…

margins competitionEconomics and EconometricsNet interest marginMonetary economicsInternational economicsLerner indexjel:G21jel:L11Competition (economics)Interest rate riskMargin (finance)Economicsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceMarket powerEuropean unionFinanceCredit riskmedia_commonJournal of Banking & Finance
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