Financial Sector transparency and net interest margins: Should the private or public Sector lead financial Sector transparency?
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Research in International Business and Finance
Abstract
This study examines the effect of private and public sector led financial sector transparency on
bank interest margins across eighty-six economies. Using a two-step dynamic system generalized
method of moments, least square dummy variables, fixed effects and bootstrap quantile panel
models between 2005 and 2016, the findings of the two-step GMM are reported as follows. First,
results reveal that financial sector transparency whether led by private or public sector reduces
interest margins. Second, while no statistical evidence was found on which of the two (private or
public sector led transparency) is more effective in dealing with bank interest margins, public
sector-led financial transparency is found to be more consistent in reducing bank interest margins
across many more economies. Third, the study shows that the effect of financial sector transparency
is visible at lower and middle levels of bank interest margins implying that economies
with lower and moderately high bank interest margin level can benefit more from policies targeted
at improving transparency in the financial sector. These findings imply that the sampled
countries must enact policies and laws that deepen and expand financial sector transparency in
order to potentially reduce bank interest margins for the good of banking market participants and
society at large.
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Research Article