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Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa

Various studies have examined the relationship between competition and efficiency in the banking sector, and others have looked at how this relates to broader economic growth. Goldsmith (1969) and King and Levine (1993), among others, consequently found that financial reform in the banking sector ha...

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Main Author: Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa
Other Authors: Biekpe, Nicholas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa
author2 Biekpe, Nicholas
author_browse Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa
Biekpe, Nicholas
author_facet Biekpe, Nicholas
Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa
author_sort Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa
collection Thesis
description Various studies have examined the relationship between competition and efficiency in the banking sector, and others have looked at how this relates to broader economic growth. Goldsmith (1969) and King and Levine (1993), among others, consequently found that financial reform in the banking sector has led to improved efficiency and competition and, as a result, led to economic growth. Financial reform in Africa came about as a result of financial liberalization that took place during the late 1980’s. This reform process was structured to increase competition and efficiency of the financial sector. This has motivated academic inquiry into the assessment and measurement of bank efficiency, bank competition and the impact on economic growth. The literature available indicates a myriad of factors that impact upon bank efficiency and bank competition. A determinant that is scarcely addressed in the literature on Africa however is the quality of institutions. Against this background, this thesis presents a collection of empirical papers on competition, efficiency and economic growth of the banking sector in Africa. Explicitly, annual firm level data on banks from 10 frontier African countries is employed to study different economic theories using various panel data econometric methodologies. The findings reveal that the banking industry in Frontier Africa is characterised by monopolistic competition. In addition, our results may suggest that bank competition could be beneficial for economic growth. As bank competition increases via the efficiency channel, this would ultimately increase economic growth. Furthermore, we also analyse the relationship between bank competition and efficiency. We observe a positive relationship between bank competition and both profit and cost efficiency, as a consequence these findings reject the Quiet Life Hypothesis. We also observe low levels of bank efficiency and competition across the sample. However, the study finds that diversification into non-interest generating activities enables Frontier African banks increase their earnings potential. The study also looks at the quality of institutions and the impact on bank competition. Our results indicate in general, we find that regulatory quality has a positive effect on the degree of competition in the banking sector. The findings recommend that to improve economic growth, policy makers should aim at improving competitive and efficiency conditions in the banking sector because a competitive banking system will allocate resources more efficiently and spur economic growth is as a result. The focus of this policy should therefore be on competition policies, comprehensive financial liberalisation policies, macroeconomic policies and regulatory and supervisory policies.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29607 Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa Biekpe, Nicholas Banking sector, Africa Various studies have examined the relationship between competition and efficiency in the banking sector, and others have looked at how this relates to broader economic growth. Goldsmith (1969) and King and Levine (1993), among others, consequently found that financial reform in the banking sector has led to improved efficiency and competition and, as a result, led to economic growth. Financial reform in Africa came about as a result of financial liberalization that took place during the late 1980’s. This reform process was structured to increase competition and efficiency of the financial sector. This has motivated academic inquiry into the assessment and measurement of bank efficiency, bank competition and the impact on economic growth. The literature available indicates a myriad of factors that impact upon bank efficiency and bank competition. A determinant that is scarcely addressed in the literature on Africa however is the quality of institutions. Against this background, this thesis presents a collection of empirical papers on competition, efficiency and economic growth of the banking sector in Africa. Explicitly, annual firm level data on banks from 10 frontier African countries is employed to study different economic theories using various panel data econometric methodologies. The findings reveal that the banking industry in Frontier Africa is characterised by monopolistic competition. In addition, our results may suggest that bank competition could be beneficial for economic growth. As bank competition increases via the efficiency channel, this would ultimately increase economic growth. Furthermore, we also analyse the relationship between bank competition and efficiency. We observe a positive relationship between bank competition and both profit and cost efficiency, as a consequence these findings reject the Quiet Life Hypothesis. We also observe low levels of bank efficiency and competition across the sample. However, the study finds that diversification into non-interest generating activities enables Frontier African banks increase their earnings potential. The study also looks at the quality of institutions and the impact on bank competition. Our results indicate in general, we find that regulatory quality has a positive effect on the degree of competition in the banking sector. The findings recommend that to improve economic growth, policy makers should aim at improving competitive and efficiency conditions in the banking sector because a competitive banking system will allocate resources more efficiently and spur economic growth is as a result. The focus of this policy should therefore be on competition policies, comprehensive financial liberalisation policies, macroeconomic policies and regulatory and supervisory policies. 2019-02-18T10:44:30Z 2019-02-18T10:44:30Z 2018 2019-02-18T08:34:28Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29607 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Banking sector, Africa
Banya, Rowland Mwesigwa
Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa
title_full Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa
title_fullStr Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa
title_full_unstemmed Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa
title_short Competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of Africa
title_sort competitiveness and efficiency of commercial banks and economic growth in the frontier economies of africa
topic Banking sector, Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29607
work_keys_str_mv AT banyarowlandmwesigwa competitivenessandefficiencyofcommercialbanksandeconomicgrowthinthefrontiereconomiesofafrica