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2022 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 102847
Author(s):  
Yongping Li ◽  
Ahmad Sobri Hashim ◽  
Liangliang Zhang ◽  
Riza Sulaiman ◽  
Hussam Alrabaiah

2022 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-45
Author(s):  
Nedim Márton El-Meouch ◽  
◽  
Róbert Tésits ◽  
Levente Alpek B. ◽  
◽  
...  

Over the past decade, due in part to the global economic crisis, a significant part of the bank branches have been closed in the European banking system, but in Hungary this proportion has been significantly higher than the European average. Therefore, the aim of the present study is to explore what aspects of commercial banks are taken into account when deciding where to be present within bank branches. This will also reveal the spatial dimension of public access to financial services. The present study seeks to answer the question of which socio-economic factors and in what form they affect the spatial structure of bank branches. The settlement-level examination can also provide additional indication of which settlements may be affected by further bank branch closures. Linear regression based on Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) parameter estimation was used to explore the factors influencing the location of bank branches. In addition, the possible clustering of bank branches was observed, i.e., whether spatial autocorrelation was present at certain stages of the analysis. Geographically Weighted Regression (GWR) was also estimated in the present study. Based on the results of the research, the resident population, the proportion of enterprises per capita, the average income, the number of neighbouring bank branches and the type of settlement all proved to be significant factors that may encourage decision-makers to establish a bank branch.


2022 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Syed Asim Ali Bukhari ◽  
Fathyah Hashim ◽  
Azlan Amran

Purpose The purpose of this study is to empirically examine the determinants and outcomes of Green Banking adoption and the moderating influence of top management commitment under the corporate environmental ethics ideology. External stakeholder pressures are analyzed as determinants of Green Banking adoption. Brand image and operational efficiency are examined as outcomes of this business ideology. Green Banking adoption is adapted as a second-order construct with four first-order reflective constructs to ensure in-depth conceptualization of the construct. Design/methodology/approach Green Banking adoption is studied at the bank branch level in a developing country, i.e. Pakistan. The data is collected from the branch managers of 212 bank branches from five major cities of Pakistan through mails. Self-administered survey was used for the data collection. The data was analyzed through the application of partial least square-structured equation modeling in SMART PLS 3.2.9. The measurement model and the structural model of the research framework were analyzed through the two-stage approach of the second-order analysis. Findings The results indicate a positive relationship between customer and competitor pressure and Green Banking adoption among bank branches in Pakistan depicting an influence of various environmental ethical pressures on bank’s adoption practices. Community pressure was shown to have no significant influence on Green Banking adoption at the branch level. The moderator of top management commitment caused a positive influence on the relationship between all the studied stakeholder pressures and Green Banking adoption. Branch managers reported branch image and operational efficiency to be enhanced due to Green Banking adoption. Originality/value This study attempts to fill in the significant gap in Green Banking adoption literature through an empirical analysis of Green Banking’s second-order construct. Currently, limited literature exists on the various aspects of Green Banking adoption, and an empirical study has not been conducted at the bank branch level. The study contributes significant practical, theoretical and methodological contributions to the area of Green Banking.


Author(s):  
Sunday Bello ◽  
Godwin Emmanuel Oyedokun ◽  
Modupeola Adeolu-Akande

The goal of this study was to see how financial inclusion affects gender-based poverty in Nigeria. Commercial bank branches, deposits, and borrowers were the proxy for financial inclusion. The poverty index was used to measure poverty reduction. The World Development Indicator (WDI) and the CBN Statistical Bulletin 2021 provided the data for this study. Finally, the study included the years 2002 to 2019. Financial inclusion reduces household poverty in Nigeria, according to the study, which used a VAR estimate. The coefficients of commercial bank branches and commercial bank deposits were (-0.004) and (-0.008), respectively, indicating that they had a negative influence on poverty reduction. Furthermore, the study discovered that having access to credit through a financial institution was crucial in lowering poverty in Nigeria over the study period. As a result, the report recommends that steps to promote the rule of law, particularly contract enforcement and financial regulatory inspection, be implemented, resulting in more financial inclusion and a reduction in poverty and income gaps, particularly between men and women. The benefits of financial inclusion must be made more widely known, particularly in rural regions, through promoting financial literacy among the poor through education, advertising, and traditional institutions.


Ekonomia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-93
Author(s):  
Łukasz Kurowski ◽  
Piotr Górski

The main goal of the deposit guarantee scheme is to prevent banking panic and consequently to prevent banking crises. The purpose of the article is to check whether the knowledge of depositors about the existence of a deposit guarantee scheme and about the terms of the guarantee affects the propensity to bank run. Thus, the presented study emphasizes that the effectiveness of the deposit guarantee scheme is dependent on the degree of knowledge about the principles of its functioning in society. The results of 200 CATI interviews suggest that this knowledge does not affect the decision to run on a bank, but determines the run type. People with higher knowledge about the principles of deposit guarantee are more likely to make a non-cash form of run (transfer of funds to another bank). For people with less knowledge the cash withdrawal is dominant. Due to the finite cash resources in bank branches, the cash withdrawal form can increase the scale of the run through its mediality.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
Yuqiao Liu

Abstract This paper investigates the effect of credit availability on the number of industrial enterprises' patents from the perspective of financial geography, using the number of bank branches in the vicinity of industrial enterprises in China as a proxy variable. The number of patents is a proxy for the innovation output of an enterprise. The study finds that the higher availability of credit resources, represented by the number of bank branches in the vicinity, inhibits the innovation output of enterprises, and this inhibitory effect is more obvious in state-owned enterprises and large enterprises. Higher availability of credit resources leads industrial firms to fall more easily into the resource curse trap and thus fail to gain more innovative capabilities. This paper also provides a theoretical and data base for China's inability to complete industrial upgrading; it provides new evidence for the phenomenon of insufficient innovation capacity of industrial enterprises under China's rapid economic development in recent years; and it also provides a policy reference for financial supply reform. Keywords: Availability of credit resources, Innovation output, Financial geography.


FEDS Notes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (3025) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly Kreiss ◽  

In the decade prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, bank branches were closing at a steady rate. Additionally, households with a bank account increasingly adopted mobile or online banking for at least a portion of their banking needs. As COVID-19 dramatically changes the desire and willingness for consumers to have in-person interactions, it may accelerate both of these trends and lead to a permanent shift in how people access financial services.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Peterson K. Ozili

Abstract This paper highlights the globally-important determinants of financial inclusion. The determi-nants identified in this paper are formal account ownership; demand for formal savings; demand for formal borrowing; financial literacy and education; debit and credit card usage; the need to receive remittances from family and friends; size of the financial system; number of automated teller machines (ATMs); number of bank branches; proximity to a bank; availability and access to mobile phones; availability of digital financial products and services; technology infrastructure; government policy; culture and traditional belief systems; national financial inclusion strategy and implementation; and direct legislation.


TEM Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1751-1760
Author(s):  
Tarık Cakar ◽  
Raşit Koker ◽  
Muhammed Ali Narin

In this study the prediction of efficiency of four different Bank Branches have been done by using Neurotic Fuzzy Data Envelopment Analysis approach. In the first stage of the study, Artificial Neural Network (ANN) model has been modelled and trained using the last five years data. The data belonging any year has been taken as input of ANN, next year data has been defined as output of ANN. Fuzzyfication process has been applied to obtained predictions based on asking managers of bank branches, after Fuzzy Data Envelopment Analysis process has been applied to fuzzy values. As a result, the bank branches parameters belonging to 2021 year have been obtained. The efficiency of 2021 for bank branches have been calculated based on Fuzzy Data Envelopment Analysis (FDEA).


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