Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the efficiency and productivity growth of the Iranian banking industry between 2003 and 2008, encompassing pre- and post-2005-reform years. Design/methodology/approach – The study uses a new decomposition of the Hicks-Moorsteen total factor productivity index developed by O’Donnell to analyse efficiency and productivity changes in a banking context. The advantage of this approach over the popular constant-returns-to-scale Malmquist productivity index is that it is free from any assumptions concerning firms’ optimising behaviour, the structure of markets, or returns to scale. The paper assumes that the production technology exhibits variable returns to scale. Findings – The banking industry’s technical efficiency level – which had improved between 2003 and 2006 – deteriorated after regulatory changes were introduced in Iran. The results obtained also show that during 2006-2007, the industry’s total factor productivity increased by 32 per cent. However, the industry experienced its highest negative scale efficiency rate of 38 per cent (DROSE ¼ 0.62) and its highest negative efficiency growth of 43 per cent (DEff ¼ 0.57) during this period. The industry also witnessed a strong drop in productivity in 2007-2008. Overall, changes in the production possibility set and scale-efficiency changes exerted dominant effects on productivity changes. Originality/value – This study is the first to use a comprehensive decomposition of the Hicks-Moorsteen TFP index to analyse efficiency and productivity changes in a banking context. Keywords Efficiency, Productivity,Banking,Data envelopment analysis (DEA),MalmquistTFP index, Hicks-Moorsteen TFP index, Performance management.
History
Citation
Arjomandi, A., Harvie, C. & Valadkhani, A. (2012). An empirical analysis of Iran's banking performance. Studies in Economics and Finance, 29 (4), 287-300.