The Efficiency Cost Of Market Power In The Banking Industry: A Test Of The "Quiet Life" And Related Hypotheses
Allen Berger () and
Timothy Hannan
The Review of Economics and Statistics, 1998, vol. 80, issue 3, 454-465
Abstract:
Traditional concerns about concentration in product markets have centered on the social loss associated with the mispricing that occurs when market power is exercised. This paper focuses on a potentially greater loss from market power - a reduction in cost efficiency brought about by the lack of market discipline in concentrated markets. We employ data from the commercial banking industry, which produces very homogeneous products in multiple markets with differing degrees of market concentration. We find the estimated efficiency cost of concentration to be several times larger than the social loss from mispricing as traditionally measured by the welfare triangle. © 1998 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Date: 1998
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Working Paper: The efficiency cost of market power in the banking industry: a test of the \"quiet life\" and related hypotheses (1994)
Working Paper: The Efficiency Cost of Market Power in the Banking Industry: A Test of the 'Quiet Life' and Related Hypotheses (1994)
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