Testing for Expense Preference Behavior: Mutual versus Stock Savings and Loans
This article investigates expense preference behavior in the savings and loan industry. Previous studies used an intercept test and, in general, concluded that managers of mutual S&Ls exhibit expense preference behavior. I derive the necessary and sufficient conditions on cost functions for the intercept test to be valid. These restrictions are rejected for the savings and loan industry. Stock and mutual S&Ls have different cost structures, and both have non-Cobb-Douglas production technologies. I derive a new, more general test for expense preference behavior that does not require the restrictive assumptions of the intercept test. The results of this test do not support earlier conclusions of managerial expense preferences.
Year of publication: |
1989
|
---|---|
Authors: | Mester, Loretta J. |
Published in: |
RAND Journal of Economics. - The RAND Corporation, ISSN 0741-6261. - Vol. 20.1989, 4, p. 483-498
|
Publisher: |
The RAND Corporation |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The changing nature of the payments system : should new players mean new rules?
Mester, Loretta J., (2000)
-
Perpetual signaling with imperfectly correlated costs
Mester, Loretta J., (1992)
-
Multiple-market contact in an incomplete-information model with imperfectly correlated costs
Mester, Loretta J., (1989)
- More ...