Information technology and risk factors for evaluating the banking industry in the Taiwan: an application of a Value Chain DEA
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3846/16111699.2014.976255Abstract
The main purpose of the paper is utilizing a new tool to measure the marginal benefits of information technology on productivity based upon identifying the two-stage best practice frontier. This study utilizes value-chain data envelopment analysis to investigate the effects of Information Technology and the trading activities of financial derivatives on the technical efficiency of a bank's production process through a two-stage analytical study with a firm-level data set. We find the impact of indicators related to capital adequacy ratios, exchange rate volatility, interest rate volatility, and long-term loans in relation to capital and ownership structure. Technical efficient precedes a reduction in problem loans, concentration of the operating units and developing information technology and utilization of financial derivatives. This paper provides a theoretical rationale and conceptualizing risk factors with environmental uncertainty. The innovation variables are determinants of the bank efficiency on Basel III Accord.
Keywords:
efficiency, Basel III Accord, Value-Chain DEA, financial derivatives, Tobit regression, commercial banks, problem loanHow to Cite
Share
License
Copyright (c) 2015 The Author(s). Published by Vilnius Gediminas Technical University.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
View article in other formats
Published
Issue
Section
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2015 The Author(s). Published by Vilnius Gediminas Technical University.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.