Sc. Ray et K. Mukherjee, A STUDY OF SIZE EFFICIENCY IN US BANKING - IDENTIFYING BANKS THAT ARETOO LARGE, International Journal of Systems Science, 29(11), 1998, pp. 1281-1294
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Computer Science Theory & Methods","Operatione Research & Management Science","Computer Science Theory & Methods","Operatione Research & Management Science","Robotics & Automatic Control
Maindiratta (1990) questioned the practical relevance of the most prod
uctive scale size (MPSS) and the associated concept of scale efficienc
y on the grounds that the observed output bundle of a firm or decision
making unit (DMU), in many situations, is an assigned task and cannot
be altered by the DMU. Also, in a market economy, the output-input co
mbinations at the MPSS may not be economically viable. It would still
be of interest to examine whether greater input saving can be achieved
if the assigned output bundle is produced collectively by several ban
ks, each operating efficiently, rather than individually by a single b
ank operating efficiently. In any specific case. the optimal number of
smaller banks-if an existing bank should be broken up at all-is deter
mined within a mixed integer programming model. In this study we apply
DEA, utilizing the input and output data for the years 1984-1990 from
201 banks each with assets in excess of 1 billion dollars and hence r
egarded as 'large banks' by asset-size classification. Although many b
anks operate in the region of diminishing returns, very few of them ar
e found to be candidates for break up. Of those that are considered to
be 'too large' some are large enough to be broken up into 13 smaller
unit or more. The mixed integer programming is also solved for the agg
regate input-output vector of the banks in the sample to determine the
output bundle of a representative bank for each year. Econometric ana
lysis of findings show that size efficiency of any observed bank decli
nes with total assets but increases with product specialization.