Effect of Liquidity and Capital on Risk-Adjusted Efficiency of Banks in Emerging Economies: Evidence From Ghana

Authors

  • Samuel Antwi University of Professional Studies
  • Mohammed Issah University of Professional Studies
  • David Sarpong Accra Technical University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jabe.v23i7.4862

Keywords:

business, economics, liquidity, capital, efficiency, banks, Ghana

Abstract

The performance of the banking industry plays a crucial role in achieving sound and accelerated economic growth. This study aims to estimate the risk-adjusted cost and profit efficiencies of banks in Ghana, to assess the effect of liquidity and capital on the estimated risk-adjusted efficiencies. The study employs the parametric (SFA) frontier over the period 2009 – 2018. The results reveal that increase in bank liquidity results in an increase in both risk-adjusted cost efficiency and risk-adjusted profit efficiency. High levels of bank capital are also associated with increases in both risk-adjusted cost efficiency and risk-adjusted profit efficiency.

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Published

2021-12-29

How to Cite

Antwi, S., Issah, M., & Sarpong, D. (2021). Effect of Liquidity and Capital on Risk-Adjusted Efficiency of Banks in Emerging Economies: Evidence From Ghana. Journal of Applied Business and Economics, 23(7). https://doi.org/10.33423/jabe.v23i7.4862

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Section

Articles