Post-Crash Development in the Indian Banking Sector

Efficiency, Competition, and Credit Risk

The Indian banking sector has undergone a profound transformation in the wake of successive economic disruptions - the global financial crisis of 2007-09, the local banking crisis of 2013-17, the currency notes ban crisis of 2016-17, and the COVID-19 pandemic. Each episode has exposed latent vulnerabilities in the financial system: inefficiencies in intermediation, the build-up of credit risk, and structural imbalances in competition.

This book offers the comprehensive empirical assessment of how the Indian banking industry has evolved in the post-crash era, using bank-level data from 2001 to 2022. Bringing together advanced econometric and frontier methodologies, including a two-stage network DEA metafrontier framework, the Panzar-Rosse approach with dynamic panel estimation, and system GMM techniques, the authors' examine three core dimensions of banking performance. The book analyses how successive crises have shaped operational efficiency, competitive conduct, and asset quality across bank ownership categories; evaluate the effectiveness of regulatory reforms including Basel III implementation, the Prompt Corrective Action framework, mergers and recapitalisation of public-sector banks, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, and the integration of FinTech innovations; and the drivers of credit risk.

Post-Crash Development in the Indian Banking Sector will be a valuable reference for those studying comparative banking in emerging-market economies and looking to reform their banking sector.

September 2026, ca. 322 Seiten, Routledge International Studies in Money and Banking, Englisch
Taylor and Francis
978-0-367-20073-2

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