The methods for ray-scale economies (RSE) and expansion-path scale economies (EPSE) are extended to the dynamic spatial setting. We apply these methods to large U.S. banks using dynamic spatial cost and revenue models and key findings include the following. First, accounting for spillovers and dynamics strengthens the case for EPSE over RSE. Second, own, spillover and total EPSE are very persistent in future periods. Third, the EPSE suggest that an appropriate regulatory size cap would shift one systemically important bank to its contemporaneous optimal scale. However, the EPSE suggest that this would be a sub-optimal dynamic scale in future periods.</p
Big banks pose substantial costs to society in the form of increased systemic risk and government ba...
Abstract We study economies of scale in banking by viewing banks as combinations of financial and hu...
In light of the policy debate on too-big-to-fail we investigate evidence of economies of scale for 1...
The methods for ray-scale economies (RSE) and expansion-path scale economies (EPSE) are extended to ...
The literature on bank scale economies focuses on the familiar type of returns to scale that are int...
We observe spatial cost dependence among medium-sized and large U.S. banks (1998Q1- 2020Q4). We con...
Our research as well as that by other authors has found scale economies at all sizes of banks and th...
Big banks pose substantial costs to society in the form of increased systemic risk and government ba...
A number of public policy issues turn on whether or not there are scale economies in commercial bank...
This paper estimates economies of scale and scope for banks within the Eurozone between 2002 and 201...
Since the passage of Dodd-Frank, government regulators have become more interested than ever in the ...
This paper presents new nonparametric measures of scale economies and TFP growth for U.S. banks. Unl...
I compare returns to scale in the U.S. and Canadian banking system from 1996 to 2015. I estimate a p...
Earlier studies found little evidence of scale economies at large banks; later studies using data fr...
Big banks pose substantial costs to society in the form of increased systemic risk and government ba...
Abstract We study economies of scale in banking by viewing banks as combinations of financial and hu...
In light of the policy debate on too-big-to-fail we investigate evidence of economies of scale for 1...
The methods for ray-scale economies (RSE) and expansion-path scale economies (EPSE) are extended to ...
The literature on bank scale economies focuses on the familiar type of returns to scale that are int...
We observe spatial cost dependence among medium-sized and large U.S. banks (1998Q1- 2020Q4). We con...
Our research as well as that by other authors has found scale economies at all sizes of banks and th...
Big banks pose substantial costs to society in the form of increased systemic risk and government ba...
A number of public policy issues turn on whether or not there are scale economies in commercial bank...
This paper estimates economies of scale and scope for banks within the Eurozone between 2002 and 201...
Since the passage of Dodd-Frank, government regulators have become more interested than ever in the ...
This paper presents new nonparametric measures of scale economies and TFP growth for U.S. banks. Unl...
I compare returns to scale in the U.S. and Canadian banking system from 1996 to 2015. I estimate a p...
Earlier studies found little evidence of scale economies at large banks; later studies using data fr...
Big banks pose substantial costs to society in the form of increased systemic risk and government ba...
Abstract We study economies of scale in banking by viewing banks as combinations of financial and hu...
In light of the policy debate on too-big-to-fail we investigate evidence of economies of scale for 1...