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Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach

In the banking industry, non-performing loans are an undesirable by-product of producing loans and may lead to inefficiency. Therefore, it is important that NPLs are accounted for in the analysis of the efficiency of banks. This paper investigated the relationship between non-performing loans and ba...

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Main Author: Haixuna, Joyce
Other Authors: Alhassan, Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Haixuna, Joyce
author2 Alhassan, Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Latif
Haixuna, Joyce
author_facet Alhassan, Latif
Haixuna, Joyce
author_sort Haixuna, Joyce
collection Thesis
description In the banking industry, non-performing loans are an undesirable by-product of producing loans and may lead to inefficiency. Therefore, it is important that NPLs are accounted for in the analysis of the efficiency of banks. This paper investigated the relationship between non-performing loans and bank efficiency in Namibia by using a two-stage approach, which was applied on quarterly data spanning the period 2010Q1 to 2020Q4. In the first stage, the Data Envelopment Analysis technique was employed to estimate efficiency scores of the eight commercial banks in Namibia, with and without non-performing loans as an undesirable output variable. The efficiency scores obtained in the first stage were then used in the second stage truncated bootstrapped regression model to determine the effect of non-performing loans on bank efficiency. The study found that there was low variability in the technical efficiency scores of the Namibian banking industry for the study period, where the trend was unevenly constant with a slight drop after 2016. Furthermore, the results indicated that leaving out non-performing loans as an output variable leads to the under-estimation of the efficiency results. From the second-stage regression results, the study found a negative significant relationship between bank efficiency and non-performing loans, which indicated that an increase in non-performing loans decreases bank efficiency. This signifies the role that credit risk management plays on the efficiency and stability of banks, in which case should be closely monitored. The result also confirmed the bad management hypothesis, as proposed by Berger and DeYoung (1992), which highlights that a lack of efficiency in management of banking institutions will result in bad loan quality. The study also identified bank size, ROA and overhead costs as other significant determinants of efficiency. From a strategic standpoint, the study suggests that the Namibian banking industry invest in systems and processes that are technologically efficient to enhance efficiency, seeing that the study observed a considerable amount of inefficiency on average, for the study period.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39370 Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach Haixuna, Joyce Alhassan, Latif development finance In the banking industry, non-performing loans are an undesirable by-product of producing loans and may lead to inefficiency. Therefore, it is important that NPLs are accounted for in the analysis of the efficiency of banks. This paper investigated the relationship between non-performing loans and bank efficiency in Namibia by using a two-stage approach, which was applied on quarterly data spanning the period 2010Q1 to 2020Q4. In the first stage, the Data Envelopment Analysis technique was employed to estimate efficiency scores of the eight commercial banks in Namibia, with and without non-performing loans as an undesirable output variable. The efficiency scores obtained in the first stage were then used in the second stage truncated bootstrapped regression model to determine the effect of non-performing loans on bank efficiency. The study found that there was low variability in the technical efficiency scores of the Namibian banking industry for the study period, where the trend was unevenly constant with a slight drop after 2016. Furthermore, the results indicated that leaving out non-performing loans as an output variable leads to the under-estimation of the efficiency results. From the second-stage regression results, the study found a negative significant relationship between bank efficiency and non-performing loans, which indicated that an increase in non-performing loans decreases bank efficiency. This signifies the role that credit risk management plays on the efficiency and stability of banks, in which case should be closely monitored. The result also confirmed the bad management hypothesis, as proposed by Berger and DeYoung (1992), which highlights that a lack of efficiency in management of banking institutions will result in bad loan quality. The study also identified bank size, ROA and overhead costs as other significant determinants of efficiency. From a strategic standpoint, the study suggests that the Namibian banking industry invest in systems and processes that are technologically efficient to enhance efficiency, seeing that the study observed a considerable amount of inefficiency on average, for the study period. 2024-04-11T13:33:17Z 2024-04-11T13:33:17Z 2022 2023-11-21T08:45:41Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCOM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39370 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle development finance
Haixuna, Joyce
Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach
title_full Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach
title_fullStr Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach
title_full_unstemmed Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach
title_short Bank efficiency and non-performing loans in Namibia: a two-stage DEA bootstrapping approach
title_sort bank efficiency and non performing loans in namibia a two stage dea bootstrapping approach
topic development finance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39370
work_keys_str_mv AT haixunajoyce bankefficiencyandnonperformingloansinnamibiaatwostagedeabootstrappingapproach