
New Insights and Different Economic Factors in Banking Sectors and Current Challenges
Author(s) -
Sajawal Piracha,
Hiba Hiba,
Usama Farooq,
Urooj Fatima,
Fahad Aslam,
Ahtsham Ishaq,
Hasnain Sial
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
scholars bulletin
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2412-9771
pISSN - 2412-897X
DOI - 10.36348/sb.2022.v08i02.005
Subject(s) - financial intermediary , financial system , business , finance , financial services , maturity (psychological) , financial repression , intermediation , intermediary , investment (military) , economics , interest rate , psychology , developmental psychology , politics , political science , law
A well-developed banking system is prerequisite for a fast-growing economy. The introduction of financial instruments is a collaborative effort that pits the results of analysis of the banking sector's development and impact on the economy against basic regulatory standards and approaches to state regulation of the financial system's development and banking subsystem. Banking sectors, according to economic literature, play an intermediation role by enabling money transfers between fund-suppliers and fund-demanders. This can be accomplished by attracting savings and then directing those funds into loans to fund various economic activities, resulting in economic growth (EG). Every bank has its own internal component that affects financial performance in a particular way the more efficient a country's financial sector develops, the more likely its limited resources will be channeled to the most productive use. Openness in the banking sector may have a direct impact on growth by enhancing access to financial services and indirectly by improving the efficiency of financial intermediaries, both of which lower the cost of financing and, as a result, encourage capital accumulation and economic growth. A variety of macroeconomic links, notably the one between financial development and long-run growth, have been studied using cross-country regressions. Microeconomic explanation differs from the traditional perspective, which sees financial intermediaries as a bridge between borrowers and lenders' differing interests in terms of the size, maturity, and risk of a financial investment.