The Effect of Specialisation on Banks' Efficiency: An International Comparison
José Pastor and
Lorenzo Serrano Martinez
International Review of Applied Economics, 2006, vol. 20, issue 1, 125-149
Abstract:
This study analyses the effects of specialisation on the cost efficiency of a set of banking systems of the European Union over the period 1992-1998. Unlike in the established literature in which specialisation differences are not considered, in this paper cost inefficiencies are decomposed into two different components: the first is related to the inefficiency associated with the composition of specialisations in each banking system and the second is related to specific inefficiencies of banks within their specialisation. The results show the existence of high cost inefficiencies. However, the intra-specialisation inefficiencies indicate that the inefficiencies of the European banking systems are much smaller when the effect of productive composition (specialisation) is discounted. This effect is much more evident in those banking systems specialised in the more costly types of business (retail banking) because their composition inefficiency is higher.
Keywords: Efficiency; DEA; specialisation; cluster (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2006
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DOI: 10.1080/02692170500362868
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