Role of Bank Specific, Macroeconomic and Risk Determinants of Banks Profitability: Empirical Evidence from Ghana's Rural Banking Industry.


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Authors

  • Eric Kofi Boadi University of Electronic Science and Technology of China Koforidua Polytechnic
  • Yao Li
  • Victor Curtis Lartey

Abstract

This paper analyzes bank specific, macroeconomic and some risk determinants of bank profitability of Rural and Community Banks (RCBs) in Ghana. Fixed effect panel regression analysis is applied on 114 RCBs annual financial reports during the period 2005-2013. The results generally suggests that capital adequacy, asset quality, liquidity management, investment, gross domestic product growth rate, inflation, funding risk and bank resilience risk are significant determinants of RCBs profitability though with varying degrees. Whereas management efficiency, and bank size cannot be considered as positive contributors to RCBs profitability. The study also indicates that continuous profitability performance of RCBs can curtail shortfall in funding risk and enhance RCBs stability. Keywords: Bank Performance, Bank Specific Determinants, Macroeconomic Factors, Risk FactorsJEL Classifications: C5, E4, G2, G21

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Author Biography

Eric Kofi Boadi, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China Koforidua Polytechnic

School of Management Science and Engineering (PhD Candidate)andAccountancy Department (lecturer)

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Published

2016-04-21

How to Cite

Boadi, E. K., Li, Y., & Lartey, V. C. (2016). Role of Bank Specific, Macroeconomic and Risk Determinants of Banks Profitability: Empirical Evidence from Ghana’s Rural Banking Industry. International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues, 6(2), 813–823. Retrieved from https://www.econjournals.com/index.php/ijefi/article/view/1835

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