Khan, Samsudin, Islam (2017), conducted an
efficiency analysis of banks in Southeast Asia,
namely 61 banks in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines
and Thailand during the period 1998 to 2012, using
the Data Envelopment Analysis method, an
intermediation approach with input variables fixed
assets, deposits, personal expenses, and output
variables are net loans and other earnings assets. The
results of this study empirically indicate that banking
efficiency in these four countries has shown
improvement. After being hit by the global crisis in
2007 and 2008, it shows that Malaysia and Thailand
were not too affected by the crisis, and Indonesia
needed a better transformation.
Determinants of bank technical efficiency:
Evidence from rural and community banks in
Ghana, by Michael Adusei (2016), aims to calculate
Rural bank efficiency in Ghana, the number of banks
measured is 101 banks. The method used is Data
Envelopment Analysis with input Deposit and
Shareholder Equity, while output Loans, Investment,
and Profit before interest and tax. The results
showed that only 20 of the 101 rural banks in Ghana
were technically efficient, where efficiency was
influenced by bank size, profitability and the quality
of bank funding. Increasing the size and quality of
rural bank funding resulted in a technical decline in
efficiency while increasing profitability improved its
technical efficiency.
Wong and Deng (2016) with the title of their
research efficiency analysis of banks in ASEAN
countries, aims to explore various aspects of
efficiency from banks in the countries incorporated
in ASEAN, in connection with the high economic
growth in these countries at the time the research
was conducted. The numbers of banks in this study
were 39 banks in the period 2000 to 2010. The
method used was Data Envelopment Analysis with
intermediation approach where the input used was
the total cost, where the total cost included expenses
in terms of employee salaries, equipment, and
physical capital such as land, buildings, and others.
Meanwhile, the output chosen is the total loan
amount, total deposit amount, and total investment.
The results showed that first, banks in Malaysia
were more efficient than the other three ASEAN
countries studied. Second, large-scale banks in
ASEAN are less efficient. Three, state banks in
ASEAN showed increased efficiency during the
study year compared to private banks.
Shahwan and Hassan (2013) with their research
entitled Efficiency analysis of UAE banks using data
envelopment analysis, aims to measure profitability,
marketability and bank social disclosure efficiency
in the UAE, the number of banks measured by 20
banks in 2009. The method used is Data
Envelopment Analysis with the input of total
deposits, total operating expenses, and leverage and
output variables are return on assets (ROA) and
return on equity (ROE). The results also showed
additional evidence of a positive correlation between
the performance of social activities and performance
profitability.
Al-Farisi and Hendrawan (2010) compare bank
efficiency between conventional and sharia bank in
Indonesia using sample 3 sharia banks and 102
conventional banks during 2002 – 2007 period. The
study used pooled leased square and alternative
profit efficiency model, and the findings are that
channeled credit has a positive effect, marketable
securities and labor cost have a negative effect on
efficiency. Another result also shows that the three
Islamic banks are within 21 of the most efficient
banks.
Fadzlan Sufian (2007) conducted a study entitled
Trends in the efficiency of Singapore's commercial
banking groups: A non-stochastic frontier DEA
window analysis approach, research was conducted
on nine banks in Singapore with the method
Window Analysis DEA, during the period 1993 to
2003. The results of banking efficiency are then
analyzed by the level of correlation with the
calculation of traditional banking performance such
as the Log of Total Assets, Log of Total Loans, and
Log of Total Deposits. The results of this study are
that during the overall research period Singapore's
banking efficiency experienced a downward trend in
the initial research period and increased dramatically
at the end of the study period. This study also shows
that banks with smaller assets tend to be more
efficient than banks that have significant assets.
3 DATA AND RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY
In this research, the observation period was carried
out during the years 2008 to 2017 with the number
of bank samples as many as 34 conventional banks
in Indonesia. Input variables are fixed assets,
personal cost, and deposit. While the output
variables used are net interest income, investment,
and loan.
The method used to measure the efficiency of
Indonesian banking is Data Envelopment Analysis.
The following is the general equation of the DEA
method:
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