Bank concentration, competition, and financial inclusion,☆☆

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rdf.2018.05.001Get rights and content
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Abstract

Expanding access to financial services holds the promise to help reduce poverty and foster economic development. However, little is still known about the determinants of the outreach of financial systems across countries. Our study is the first attempt to employ a large panel of countries, several indicators of financial inclusion and a comprehensive set of bank competition measures to study the role of banking system structure as a determinant of cross-country variability in financial outreach for households. We use panel data from 83 countries over a 10-year period to estimate models with both country and time fixed effects. We find that greater banking industry concentration is associated with more access to deposit accounts and loans, provided that the market power of banks is limited. We find evidence that countries in which regulations allow banks to engage in a broader scope of activities are also characterized by greater financial inclusion. Our results are robust to changes in sample, data, and estimation strategy and suggest that the degree of competition is an important aspect of inclusive financial sectors.

JEL classification

G21
L11
O16

Keywords

Financial inclusion
Bank concentration
Market power

Cited by (0)

Peer review under responsibility of Africagrowth Institute.

☆☆

We are grateful to Emily Conover, Corinne Delechat, Jose Gomez-Gonzalez, and numerous participants at the Hamilton-Colgate Seminar and the 2017 Western Economic Association International Conference for helpful comments and discussions. We are also thankful to Judit Temesvary for useful comments and advice in the early stages of this project. Dan Kraynak and Jaemin Woo provided helpful research assistance. We are solely responsible for any errors in this manuscript.