Search results for "Market Power"

showing 10 items of 38 documents

EXPLANATORY FACTORS OF MARKET POWER IN THE BANKING SYSTEM

2007

The aim of the study is to analyse the explanatory factors of market power in the banking system. Using as laboratory the Spanish banking system in the period 1986–2002, results show an increase of market power from the mid-1990s. Of the set of variables that the model posits as explaining market power, those with the greatest explanatory power are size, efficiency and specialization; concentration is not significant. This last result shows the limitations of the approaches, studies and decision-making rules of economic policy that uses market concentration as a proxy for the degree of competition.

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsFactor marketEconomics and EconometricsMarket analysisMarket saturationEconomicsNonmarket forcesMarket powerMarket concentrationExplanatory powerThe Manchester School
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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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The social costs of bank market power: Evidence from Mexico

2008

This paper estimates the social costs of market power (Harberger's triangle) in the Mexican banking system over the period 1993–2005. It also tests the so-called “quiet life” hypothesis which postulates a negative effect of market power on bank management efficiency. The social cost attributable to market power in 2005 is 0.15% of GDP, while that deriving from the cost (profit) inefficiency of banking management is 0.021% (0.075%) of GDP. The results allow us to reject the quiet life hypothesis in the deposits market. However, market power in the setting of the interest rate on loans has a negative effect on cost efficiency. Journal of Comparative Economics 36 (3) (2008) 467–488.

Economic efficiencyMacroeconomicsFactor marketEconomics and EconometricsLower of cost or marketMarket ratebusiness.industrySocial costmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary economicsInterest rateEconomicsRetail bankingMarket powerbusinessmedia_commonJournal of Comparative Economics
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Bank competition and multimarket contact intensity

2021

Abstract This paper analyzes the effect of multimarket contact on bank competition. We propose a completely new multimarket contact indicator that not only considers the existence of contacts between banks, but also their intensity, by analyzing the strength–weakness position of banks in terms of branch numbers in comparison to their rivals in the markets where they coincide. We test the new indicator empirically in the context of the Spanish banking sector. The main results suggest a negative relationship between market power and the number of multimarket contacts, rejecting the hypothesis of tacit collusion in the Spanish banking sector. However, the result changes completely when we cons…

Economics and Econometrics050208 finance05 social sciencesMonetary economicsBanking sectorTacit collusionConsolidation (business)Negative relationship0502 economics and businessCollusionEconomicsMarket power050207 economicsFinanceMultimarket contactJournal of International Money and Finance
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Measuring welfare loss of market power: an application to European banks

2004

From a model of imperfect competition among banking firms, this study derives an analytical expression that allows empirical quantification of the welfare loss associated with imperfect competition. Its application to the specific case of the European banking system shows that in spite of the process of deregulation, market power increased during the 1990s in 10 out of the 15 countries of the EU. The welfare loss associated with market power represents close to 2.5% of EU GDP.

Economics and EconometricsDeregulationSpiteEconomicsDeadweight lossMarket powerInternational economicsImperfect competitionApplied Economics Letters
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Economic value, competition and financial distress in the european banking system

2012

Abstract In this paper we examine the impact of a large number of factors at the bank level (liquidity and credit risks, asset size, income diversification and market power), at the industry level (banking concentration) and macro-level (real GDP growth) on bank financial distress using an unbalanced panel of 308 European commercial banks between 1996 and 2009. The observations falling below a given threshold of the empirical distribution of the Shareholder Value Ratio proxy bank financial distress. We employ a panel probit regression and, given the presence of overlapping data giving rise to residual autocorrelation, we use the Bertschek and Lechner (1998) robust estimator of the covarianc…

Economics and EconometricsFinancial economicsbankingBANKING SYSTEMCOMPETITIONMonetary economicsDISTRESSRobust InferenceProbit modelEconomicsAsset (economics)Market powerEVARobust inferenceLiquidity riskShareholder valueBankingPanel probitEVA; banking; Panel Probit; Robust Inference; ForecastingMarket liquidityReal gross domestic productPanel ProbitCOMPETITION; DISTRESS; BANKING SYSTEMFinanceForecastingCredit risk
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Monopolistic competition and different wage setting systems

2010

In this paper, we present a disequilibrium unemployment model without labor market frictions and monopolistic competition in the goods market within an infinite horizon model of growth. We consider different wage setting systems and compare wages, the unemployment rate, and income per capita in the long-run at firm, sector, and national (centralized) levels. The aim of this paper is to determine under which conditions, the inverted-U hypothesis between unemployment and the degree of centralization of wage bargaining, reported by Calmfors and Driffill [Economic Policy, 6, 14¿61, 1988], is confirmed. Our analysis shows that a high degree of market power normally produces the inverted-U shape …

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsSociology and Political ScienceDisequilibrium Unemploymentmedia_common.quotation_subjectDisequilibriumWageSocial WelfareGrowthPer capita incomeEconomiajel:E24jel:O41Monopolistic competitionDisequilibrium Unemployment Monopolistic Competition Growth Wage Setting Systems.Efficiency wageUnemploymentWage Setting SystemsEconomicsmedicineMonopolistic CompetitionMarket powermedicine.symptommedia_common
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Second-best taxation for a polluting monopoly with abatement investment

2018

This paper characterizes the optimal tax rule to regulate a polluting monopoly when the firm has the possibility of investing in an abatement technology and the environmental damages are caused by a stock pollutant. The optimal policy is given by the stagewise feedback Stackelberg equilibrium of a dynamic policy game between a regulator and a monopolist. The regulator playing as the leader chooses an emission tax to maximize net social welfare, and the monopolist acting as the follower selects the output and the investment in abatement technology to maximize profits. We find that the optimal tax has two components. The first component is negative and equal to the gap between the marginal re…

Economics and EconometricsMarginal revenue020209 energyShadow price05 social sciencesSubsidy02 engineering and technologyMicroeconomicsGeneral Energy0502 economics and business0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringDamagesEconomicsStackelberg competitionMarket power050207 economicsOptimal taxMonopolyEnergy Economics
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Does competition enhance the double-bottom-line performance of microfinance institutions?

2020

Abstract This paper investigates how competition affects the double-bottom-line performance of microfinance institutions (MFIs). While classical economic theory highlights that competition enhances efficiency and benefits both customers and firms, we argue that this is unlikely to apply to institutions operating in socially oriented industries, such as microfinance. Using a cross-country dataset of 4576 MFI-year observations (1139 unique MFIs) operating in 59 countries over a 10-year period (2005-2014), we find that competition has an adverse effect on MFIs’ economic sustainability and that competition undermines their breadth of outreach but enhances their depth of outreach. These results …

Economics and EconometricsMicrofinance050208 financeCorporate governance05 social scienceslaw.inventionCompetition (economics)OutreachBusiness economicslaw0502 economics and businessDouble bottom lineMarket powerEndogeneityBusiness050207 economicsFinanceIndustrial organizationJournal of Banking & Finance
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The determinants of net interest income in the Mexican banking system: An integrated model

2009

This paper analyzes net interest income in the Mexican banking system over the period 1993-2005. Taking as reference the seminal work by Ho and Saunders (1981) and subsequent extensions by other authors, our study models the net interest margin simultaneously including operating costs and diversification and specialization as determinants of the margin. The results referring to the Mexican case show that its high margins can be explained mainly by average operating costs and by market power. Although non-interest income has increased in recent years, its economic impact is low. El trabajo analiza el margen de intermediación de la banca Mexicana en el periodo 1996-2005. Tomando como referenc…

Economics and EconometricsNet interest marginDiversification (finance)Monetary economicsjel:G21Net interest incomejel:L10EconomicsEconomic impact analysisMarket powerEmpirical evidenceBanca Margen financiero Costes operativos Poder de Mercado Ingresos no financieros. banking net interest income operating cost non-interest incomeFinanceOperating costJournal of Banking & Finance
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