Competition, Product Differentiation and Quality Provision

Competition, Product Differentiation and Quality Provision
Author: Andrew Cohen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 58
Release: 2004
Genre:
ISBN:

"We analyze the effects of market structure on the branching decisions of three types of depository institution: multimarket banks, single-market banks, and thrift institutions. We argue that additional branches increase quality for an institution's consumers, and examine the interaction between market structure and this particular measure of quality. We account for endogenous market structure using an equilibrium structural model, which corrects for bias caused by correlation in the unobservables that may drive entry and branching activity. We estimate the model using data from over 1,750 concentrated rural markets. Our results demonstrate the importance of product differentiation, as competition from multimarket banks is associated with denser branch networks for all types of firm while the opposite correlation holds when competitors are single-market banks or thrifts"--Abstract.

Competition, Product Differentiation and Quality Provision

Competition, Product Differentiation and Quality Provision
Author: Andrew Cohen
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2004
Genre: Bank management
ISBN:

"We analyze the effects of market structure on the branching decisions of three types of depository institution: multimarket banks, single-market banks, and thrift institutions. We argue that additional branches increase quality for an institution's consumers, and examine the interaction between market structure and this particular measure of quality. We account for endogenous market structure using an equilibrium structural model, which corrects for bias caused by correlation in the unobservables that may drive entry and branching activity. We estimate the model using data from over 1,750 concentrated rural markets. Our results demonstrate the importance of product differentiation, as competition from multimarket banks is associated with denser branch networks for all types of firm while the opposite correlation holds when competitors are single-market banks or thrifts"--Federal Reserve Board web site.

The Structure and Regulation of Financial Markets

The Structure and Regulation of Financial Markets
Author: Peter D. Spencer
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 286
Release: 2000-10-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0191586862

Aimed at advanced undergraduate and graduate students in economics, banking, and finance, this is a core textbook for the financial markets, institutions, and regulation option of courses in financial economics. It integrates modern theories of asymmetric information into the analysis of financial institutions, relating the theory to current developments. The text begins with an analysis of adverse selection in retail financial products like life assurance before looking at open capital markets where trades and prices provide information. It then progresses to the more complex areas of corporate governance and financial intermediation in which information is concealed or confidential and moral hazard and verification problems become important. These chapters study the various mechanisms that the financial markets have developed to allow investors to delegate the management of their assets to others. This analysis is used to show how regulation can reduce the risk of financial failure and how legal, accounting, and regulatory mechanisms can help shape a country's corporate and financial architecture. These difficult theoretical concepts are conveyed through the careful use of numerical illustrations and topical case studies. Each chapter ends with a set of exercises to test and reinforce students' comprehension of the material. Worked solutions are provided for the numerical exercises.

Competition Impact of Market Structure

Competition Impact of Market Structure
Author: Anna Anisimova
Publisher:
Total Pages: 13
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

This empirical paper adds to competition and industrial organization literature by exploring the interplay between industry structure and competitiveness on local, rather than nation-wide, markets. We use micro-level statistical data for banks in two Russian regions (Bashkortostan and Tatarstan) to estimate Herfindahl-Hirschman index, Lerner index, and Panzar-Rosse model. We estimate Panzar-Rosse model in two ways: via the widely used price-equation that accounts for scale effects and then via a revenue-equation that disregards scale effects as suggested by Bikker et al. (2009). We find both regional markets to be ruled by monopolistic competition, although estimation by revenue-equation does not reject monopoly hypothesis for Tatarstan. Existence of sizeable locally-owned and operated institutions does not necessarily lead to higher competitiveness of the given regional market, and the results from non-structural methods of estimation suggest that bank competition in Bashkortostan is stronger than in Tatarstan. Going further away from aggregated analysis we compute Lerner indices in two product segments of Tatarstan - retail and corporate loans - and find that retail segment is significantly more competitive. Local banks exert more market power in corporate loans, while federal branches - in retail loans.

Competition in Banking

Competition in Banking
Author: Günther Bröker
Publisher: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development ; Washington, D.C. : OECD Publications and Information Centre
Total Pages: 250
Release: 1989
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Presents the results of an extensive enquiry into banking structures and regulations in OECD countries and assesses the most significant changes since the early sixty. Includes a history of deregulation and an inventory of relevant anti-trust laws, a set of definitions on financial regulation and competition policy and statistics on structural changes in financial systems.