| Alexander Conrad, Doris Neuberger and Lucinda  Trigo Gamarra, The impact of regional economic conditions on the efficiency of  savings banks in the light of demographic change, Credit and Capital Markets 47  (4), 2014, 533-570http://ejournals.duncker-humblot.de/doi/abs/10.3790/ccm.47.4.533
   Abstract This paper examines the influence of  environmental factors on the technical and revenue efficiency of German savings  banks. It employs a two-step approach, using, first, data envelopment analysis  to calculate efficiency and, second, multivariate regressions to examine the  influence of regional economic conditions on efficiency. Taking into account  demographic change with growing regional disparities in economic wealth and  population, it differentiates between declining and growing regions and finds  that regional factors explain 10-20% of the variation in efficiency levels.  Competitive pressure is the most important environmental factor affecting  efficiency, consistent with the quiet life hypothesis. Higher population  density and branch penetration enhance efficiency in growing regions while, in  declining regions, a greater percentage of older people reduces bank  efficiency. Demographic changes through population aging and migration from  poor to rich regions impair the efficiency of banks in declining, peripheral  regions. Our results show that the public mission of providing financial  services to all regions has its costs in terms of efficiency losses. On the  other hand, the regional principle of the savings banks sector guarantees  competition between banking groups in most regions, which has the largest  impact on efficiency. |