Assessing the Role of the Fintech Era on the Banking Stability of an Emerging Economy: Interaction Analysis of the Indian Banking Industry
Author:
Syed Aamir Aijaz1ORCID, Grima Simon2ORCID, Sood Kiran3ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Institute of Management, Commerce and Economics , Shri Ramswaroop Memorial University , Lucknow , India 2. University of Malta , Malta , Faculty of Economics Management and Accountancy , And the University of Latvia , Riga , Latvia . Faculty of Business, Management and Economics 3. Chitkara Business School , Chitkara University , Rajpura 140401 , Punjab , India Research Fellow, Women Researchers Council (WRC) , Azerbaijan State University of Economics (UNEC)
Abstract
Abstract
Research background
The rapid expansion in recent fintech innovations has garnered researchers’ attention to evaluate its influence on the banking industry.
Purpose
In this quest, the current study conducts an interaction analysis to measure the impact of the fintech era on Indian banking stability.
Research methodology
S imilarly t o p revious s tudies, w e u se a regression analysis and a Pearson correlation on the transition period of the fintech era to measure the impact of explanatory variables on the outcome variables of the Indian banking industry. Furthermore, as a robustness test, we have also used the Generalised Method of Moments system approach. This enabled us to make comparisons with similar studies.
Results
Using annual data from 1995 to 2021, the study reveals that, compared to the first fintech era, the second era assisted in reducing NPLs and enhancing financial stability in India. The study concludes that during the second wave of the fintech revolution, through interaction analysis, explanatory variables positively influence banking stability and NPLs.
Novelty
The current study contributes toward understanding the significance of fintech development from the context of an emerging country. It also helps to interpret the importance of disruptive forces of fintech development in the banking industry.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Reference49 articles.
1. Arner, D.W., Barberis, J., Buckey, R.P. (2016). FinTech, RegTech, and the reconceptualisation of financial regulation. Nw. J. Int’l L. & Bus., 37, 371. 2. Arora, M., Gupta, J., Mittal, A. (2023). Adoption of food delivery apps during a crisis: exploring an extended technology adoption model. Global Knowledge, Memory and Communication. 3. Barba Navaretti, G., Calzolari, G., Pozzoli, A. (2017). Getting Rid of NPLs in Europe. European Economy, 1, 11–30. 4. Boateng, H., Adam, D.R., Okoe, A.F., Anning-Dorson, T. (2016). Assessing the determinants of Internet banking adoption intentions: A social cognitive theory perspective. Computers in Human Behavior, 65, 468–478. DOI: 10.1016/j.chb.2016.09.017. 5. Buchak, G., Matvos, G., Piskorski, T., Seru, A. (2018). Fintech, regulatory arbitrage, and the rise of shadow banks. Journal of Financial Economics, 130(3), 453–483. DOI: 10.1016/j. jfineco.2018.03.011
|
|