The Effects of Financial Liberalization and New Bank Entry on Market Structure and Competition in Turkey

59 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2016

See all articles by Cevdet Denizer

Cevdet Denizer

Center for Economics and Econometrics; World Bank

Date Written: September 1997

Abstract

Promoting competition in Turkey's newly liberalized financial market requires striking a balance between potentially conflicting objectives and the risk entailed in financial deregulation. Banking must be regulated and well-supervised, but Turkey's banking system also needs to become far more competitive.

Until 1980, Turkey`s financial system was shaped to support state-oriented development. After the 1960s, the financial system, dominated by commercial banks, became an instrument of planned industrialization. Turkey had an uncompetitive financial market and an inefficient banking system. Controlled interest rates, directed credit, high reserve requirements and other restrictions on financial intermediation, and restricted entry of new banks Ñ plus the exit of many banks betwee 1960 and 1980 Ñ created a concentrated market dominated by banks owned by industrial groups with oversized branch networks and high overhead costs.

Turkey since 1980 has seen a trend toward liberalization of its financial market. Reforms eliminated interest rate controls, eased the entry of new financial institutions, and allowed new types of instruments.

Regulatory barriers were relaxed, attracting many banks (both Turkish and foreign) into the system, and Turkey's banking system became integrated with world markets.

Denizer examines how reform has changed the system, focusing on Turkey's commercial retail banking market. He finds that:

Although reform reduced concentration in the industry, leading banks are still able to coordinate their pricing decisions overtly. High profitability appears to have resulted from the banks' uncompetitive pricing rather than their efficiency. Deregulation and liberalization should be continued and strengthened.

The entry of small-scale firms alone is not enough to increase competition, so new banks should probably not be expected to alter the market structure.

To promote competition will require addressing barriers to both entry and mobility. The main barrier to mobility seems to be the size of the large banks, which exerts a significant negative effect on competition.

Interbank rivalry among the leading banks can't be facilitated without creating new banks of a certain size with a reasonable number of branches. Breaking up public banks (which hold 30 percent of sectoral assets, excluding the Agricultural Bank and three development banks) could help create 15 to 20 new banks with 40 to 50 branches. This would reduce concentration and improve mobility in retail banking.

Breaking up the public banks before privatization would probably also improve their governance structures and efficiency.

Promoting the entry of nonbanks and local banks would also increase the number of institutions competing for deposits. Turkey lacks a healthy variety of credit institutions and should consider developing a mortgage market and creating institutions for housing finance.

This paper-a product of the Development Research Group-is part of a larger effort in the group to study financial reforms and financial markets.

Suggested Citation

Denizer, Cevdet, The Effects of Financial Liberalization and New Bank Entry on Market Structure and Competition in Turkey (September 1997). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=604998

Cevdet Denizer (Contact Author)

Center for Economics and Econometrics ( email )

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HOME PAGE: http://www.cee.boun.edu.tr

World Bank ( email )

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