Banking sector performance and economic growth: evidence from Southeast European countries

2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 267-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veton Zeqiraj ◽  
Shawkat Hammoudeh ◽  
Omer Iskenderoglu ◽  
Aviral Kumar Tiwari
2018 ◽  
Vol III (I) ◽  
pp. 81-89
Author(s):  
Junaid Khan ◽  
Muhammad Faizan Malik ◽  
Muhammad Ilyas

This paper empirically finds the link between the banking sector performance and political stability on Economic growth. Panel data was used encompassing the time frame from 2006 to 2016 for banks operating in Pakistan. This paper main purpose at discovering that the banking sector performance, political stability, and other bank-specific factors have a vital impact on enhancing the procedure of economic growth in Pakistan. “Predictable outcomes suggest that economic growth in Pakistan is in long-term stability relationship; banking sector and political stability have long-term significant impact on economic growth and subsequently, economic growth converge to their longterm stability levels by the means created by Investment. This supports the reality that political certainty or stability is capable of stimulating a country’s development process”. Therefore, revealed significant relationship between banking sector performance and political stability of Pakistan on economic growth.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Darya Chumachenko ◽  
Tatyana Derkach ◽  
Vitalina Babenko ◽  
Marharyta Krutko ◽  
Sergey Yakubovskiy ◽  
...  

This study examines banking transformations in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) under conditions of economic liberalization, dependence between economic development of countries and efficiency of their banking systems. The comparative method and methods of economic-mathematical modeling were applied. Considering the positive correlation between financial structure and economic growth, confirmed by literature findings, the development of the financial sector can become a crucial factor in convergence for the new EU members. Analysis revealed lower depth of financial sector in Central and Eastern European countries region in comparison to the Eurozone, but higher efficiency and growth rates. Regression models confirmed the significant causality between financial sector expansion and economic growth of CEE countries, but extremely high foreign market shares in the banking sector of region create prerequisites for financial shocks transmission through contagion channel in case of economic instability in the countries of banks’ origin.


2015 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-221
Author(s):  
Elena Naumovska ◽  
Kiril Jovanovski ◽  
Gorgji Gockov

Abstract The subject of this paper is the way in which the banking sector in Macedonia contributes to the economic growth by performing five basic functions: savings mobilization, risk diversification, resource allocation, corporate control and easing exchange. The basic purpose of this paper is, through assessment of the relative importance of each of the functions of the banking sector and analysis of the relationship existing between the banking sector intermediation and economic growth (as measured by GDP) to investigate the impact of the banking sector on the real sector performance in the Macedonia. According to the obtained results the paper provides conclusions for opportunities and directions for increasing the efficiency of the banking sector in the Republic of Macedonia.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 201-206
Author(s):  
Burim Gashi

Since the collapse of the centrally-planned system, countries in transition have walked a rough road to recovery. Almost instantly, national economies opened to global markets, enforced price liberalization measures, combined with macroeconomic stabilization policies and structural reforms. At the beginning of the 1990s, they experienced a fall in output, accompanied by other deteriorating features, such as high unemployment, emigration, high level of informal economy, deteriorating balance of payments, growing debt, wars, ethnic problems etc. The annual real GDP per capita growth of most transitive economies during the early periods of transition (1990-1993) was. A major caveat in assessing the depth of the output fall is that it refers to official estimates and thus ignores the shadow economy or informal sector, which has grown very rapidly in the early transition years. The South-East European countries, additionally affected by the wars of Yugoslav secession, recorded notably larger output losses at the beginning of the transition than Central-East European Countries, reaching a negative peak of -20%, and an average decline of 10.90%, but exhibited high growth rates in the mid and late 1990s, as hostilities ended, macroeconomic stabilization took hold and structural reforms advanced. The speed of recovery differed significantly across countries, particularly in the period 1994-2001.This is particuly case in countries from Western Balkan where they were faceing and still face many economic problems like as prolonged recessions, due to differing reform progress, varying impact of the war, unemployment, poverty, low living standards and inflation. Thus, these countries always try to increase their national income and hence create more jobs with maintained economic growth. Bearing this in mind it is essential the countries from this region consider steps towards financial liberalization and deregulation which will help open the borders for capital flows and attract new investments. In fact, financial and banking sector development leads to the increase in economic growth in any economy through financing economic development.Banking system is important to the economic growth through its ability in gathering and attracting deposits from savers. Secondly, its role in providing loans to encourage investment and production. Thirdly, its ability in creating economic expansion to the most of economic sectors such as; Agriculture, industry and trade sector. Fourthly, its intermarry role between savers and borrowers. Finally, banking industry provide entrepreneurs with required loans in order to finance the adoption of new production techniques. This paper examines the question whether in 6 countries from Western Balkan the banking sector influences economic growth. The empirical investigation was carried out using fixed effect model. In this study we use two measures for the level of banking development bank credit to private sector in relation to GDP (private credit) and interst margin. Namely, private credit still appears a superior option to the pure ratio of broad money to GDP used in some studies, because it excludes credits by development banks and loans to the government and public enterprises. We expect positive relationship between private credit and economic growth. The second variable is interest margin is likely a good estimator for efficiency in the banking sector as it describes transaction costs within the sector. If the margin declines due to a decrease in transaction costs, the share of savings going to investments increases. As growth is positively linked to investment, a decrease in transaction costs should accelerate economic growth. The results suggests that credit to the private sector is positively and significant, while interes margin is negatively and insignificant related to economic growth.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-109
Author(s):  
Željka Asanović

AbstractThere is a long tradition in literature that banks can play a special role in the propagation of economic fluctuations. Theory suggests many channels through which financial system affects, and is affected by, economic growth. One of the most important empirical studies on this topic shows a strong positive relation between financial development and economic growth. However, the hypothesis that credit expansion is the main development instrument was challenged in the Asian crisis in the second half of the 1990s, and then even more strongly in the crisis after 2008 which was followed by almost a decade of economic stagnation. Development of the banking sector in Southeast European countries in the pre-crisis period was characterized by relatively high credit growth rates and, consequently, with an increase of the credit-to-GDP ratio. Some authors argue that the marginal effect of financial depth on economic growth becomes negative when credit to the private sector reaches about 100% of GDP. Taking into account relatively low level of credit-to-GDP ratio, we may assume that there is still enough room for finance to contribute to economic growth in Southeast European countries.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoo-Duk Kang ◽  
Cheol-Won Lee ◽  
Tae Hyun Oh ◽  
Hyun Jean Lee ◽  
Junyup Kim

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoo-Duk Kang ◽  
Cheol-Won Lee ◽  
Tae Hyun Oh ◽  
Hyun Jean Lee ◽  
Junyup Kim

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Kofi Adom ◽  
Franklin Amuakwa-Mensah ◽  
Salome Amuakwa-Mensah

Abstract The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 7 emphasizes the need for economies around the world to double their efforts in energy efficiency improvements. This is because improvements in energy efficiency can trigger economic growth and considered as one of the ‘green’ growth strategies due to its carbon free content. To this end, some empirical studies have investigated the nexus between economic growth and energy efficiency, but the effects of the latter on financial indicators have not been sufficiently studied in the literature, at least in developing economies like Africa. This study examines the effect of energy efficiency improvements on commercial bank profitability under different political regimes (i.e., autocratic and democratic political regimes); something previous literature had neglected. The study uses panel data, consisting of 43 African countries and the simultaneous System Generalized Method of Moments. We found that energy efficiency improvement is more likely to induce higher bank profitability in political institutions with the characteristics of centralization of power compared with those with decentralization of power. Furthermore, for the banking sector, the findings suggest that energy utilization behavior of clients should be included in the loan or credit valuation process. For the government, the agenda of energy efficiency should be aggressively pursued while taking cognizance of creating a political environment that weans itself from a ‘grandfathering’ behavior.


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