2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2015.04.014
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Are European banks too big? Evidence on economies of scale

Abstract: In light of the policy debate on too-big-to-fail we investigate evidence of economies of scale for 103European listed banks over 2000 to 2011. Using the Stochastic Frontier Approach, the results show that economies of scale are widespread across different size classes of banks and are especially large for the biggest banks. At the country level, banks operating in the smallest financial systems and the countries most affected by the financial crises realize the lowest scale economies (including diseconomies) d… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
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“…Even among banks in the fourth quartile (the largest 25% of banks by assets), we reject CRS in favor of IRS for a substantial number of banks, and in favor of DRS for very few banks. Our results are thus similar to other recent studies finding that even many large banks operate under increasing RTS (e.g., Becalli, Anolli, & Borello, ; Hughes & Mester, ; Kovner et al, ; Wheelock & Wilson, ).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Even among banks in the fourth quartile (the largest 25% of banks by assets), we reject CRS in favor of IRS for a substantial number of banks, and in favor of DRS for very few banks. Our results are thus similar to other recent studies finding that even many large banks operate under increasing RTS (e.g., Becalli, Anolli, & Borello, ; Hughes & Mester, ; Kovner et al, ; Wheelock & Wilson, ).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…These studies suggest that technological advances may have also generated IRS for banks. Indeed, using a variety of methodologies and datasets, several recent studies find more evidence of substantial economies of scale in banking, with some finding that even very large banks operate under IRS (e.g., Hughes & Mester, ; Kovner, Vickrey, & Zhou ; and Wheelock & Wilson, , for US banks; and Becalli, Anolli, & Borello, , for European banks). However, other studies are less conclusive (e.g., Feng & Zhang, ; Restrepo‐Tobón & Kumbhakar, ) and questions remain.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The economic scale in the group of small and medium banks have not been achieved. This finding contrasts with the conclusion of Berger and Hannan (1998), however it is much like the latest findings in US and European banks (Kovner, Vickrey andZhou, 2014 andBeccali, Anolli, andBorello, 2015).…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 89%
“…Big bank can achieve economies of scale and has a natural competitive cost compared to its competitors (Hughes and Mester (2013) and Kovner, Vickrey and Zhou (2014)). Beccalli, Anolli, and Borello (2015) show that big banks in European countries operates as a big financial conglomerate with broad financial services and far more efficient than their smaller competitors. Feng and Serlitis (2010) found same result in USA banks.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies suggest that technological advances may have also generated IRS for banks. Indeed, using a variety of methodologies and datasets, several recent studies find more evidence of substantial economies of scale in banking, with some finding that even very large banks operate under IRS (e.g., Wheelock and Wilson, 2012;Hughes and Mester, 2013;andKovner et al, 2014 for U.S. banks, andBecalli et al, 2015 for European banks). However, other studies are less conclusive (e.g., Feng and Zhang, 2014;Restrepo-Tobón and Kumbhakar, 2015) and questions remain.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%