The efficiency and productivity of Malaysian banks:an output distance function approach


Autoria(s): Abdul-Majid, Mariani; Saal, David S.; Battisti, Giuliana
Data(s)

01/10/2008

Resumo

This study employs stochastic frontier analysis to analyze Malaysian commercial banks during 1996-2002, and particularly focuses on determining the impact of Islamic banking on performance. We derive both net and gross efficiency estimates, thereby demonstrating that differences in operating characteristics explain much of the difference in outputs between Malaysian banks. We also decompose productivity change into efficiency, technical, and scale change using a generalised Malmquist productivity index. On average, Malaysian banks experience mild decreasing return to scale and annual productivity change of 2.37 percent, with the latter driven primarily by technical change, which has declined over time. Our gross efficiency estimates suggest that Islamic banking is associated with higher input requirements. In addition, our productivity estimates indicate that the potential for full-fledged Islamic banks and conventional banks with Islamic banking operations to overcome the output disadvantages associated with Islamic banking are relatively limited. Merged banks are found to have higher input usage and lower productivity change, suggesting that bank mergers have not contributed positively to bank performance. Finally, our results suggest that while the East Asian financial crisis had an interim output-increasing effect in 1998, the crisis prompted a continuing negative impact on the output performance by increasing the volume of non-performing loans.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/18777/1/Efficiency_and_Productivity_ofMalaysian_Banks_An_Output_Distance_Function_Approach_25_Ogos.pdf

Abdul-Majid, Mariani; Saal, David S. and Battisti, Giuliana (2008). The efficiency and productivity of Malaysian banks:an output distance function approach. Working Paper. Aston University, Birmingham (UK).

Publicador

Aston University

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/18777/

Tipo

Monograph

NonPeerReviewed