His primary areas of investigation include Financial system, Monetary economics, Competition, Sample and Frontier. Laurent Weill studied Financial system and Financial inclusion that intersect with China, Mobile banking and Probit. He has included themes like Non-performing loan, Order and Retail banking in his Monetary economics study.
Laurent Weill interconnects State ownership and Chinese financial system in the investigation of issues within Competition. His work investigates the relationship between Frontier and topics such as Corporate governance that intersect with problems in Corruption, International political economy and Public finance. His Lerner index research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Emerging markets and International economics.
His scientific interests lie mostly in Monetary economics, Financial system, Sample, Loan and Competition. The Monetary economics study combines topics in areas such as Bond and China. Laurent Weill interconnects Financial inclusion, Foreign ownership, Finance and Chinese financial system in the investigation of issues within Financial system.
You can notice a mix of various disciplines of study, such as Perception, Econometrics and Robustness, in his Sample studies. The various areas that he examines in his Loan study include Information asymmetry, Syndicate and Collateral. His Lerner index study in the realm of Competition interacts with subjects such as Banking industry and Literature study.
Loan, Monetary economics, Sample, Demographic economics and Financial system are his primary areas of study. His Monetary economics research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Syndicated loan, Profitability index and China. His work in Profitability index addresses subjects such as Panel data, which are connected to disciplines such as Business cycle.
Laurent Weill combines subjects such as Inefficiency and Lien with his study of China. The study incorporates disciplines such as Higher education, Dictatorship and Educational attainment in addition to Demographic economics. His study looks at the relationship between Financial system and fields such as Autocracy, as well as how they intersect with chemical problems.
His main research concerns Monetary economics, Sample, Democracy, Large sample and Inefficiency. His work carried out in the field of Monetary economics brings together such families of science as Profitability index and Logit. His study in Sample intersects with areas of studies such as Politics, Public information, Educational attainment, Dictatorship and Higher education.
His studies in Democracy integrate themes in fields like CONTEST, Public finance and Financial system. Overall efficiency, China, Transient and Lien are fields of study that overlap with his Large sample research.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Is corruption an efficient grease
Pierre-Guillaume Méon;Laurent Weill.
World Development (2010)
Banking efficiency in transition economies
Laurent Weill.
Economics of Transition (2003)
Measuring Cost Efficiency in European Banking: A Comparison of Frontier Techniques
Laurent Weill.
Journal of Productivity Analysis (2004)
Bad luck or bad management? Emerging banking market experience
Jiří Podpiera;Laurent Weill.
Journal of Financial Stability (2008)
The determinants of financial inclusion in Africa
Alexandra Zins;Laurent Weill.
Review of Development Finance (2016)
Understanding financial inclusion in China
Zuzana Fungáčová;Zuzana Fungáčová;Laurent Weill;Laurent Weill.
China Economic Review (2015)
Are private banks more efficient than public banks? Evidence from Russia
Alexei Karas;Koen Schoors;Laurent Weill.
Research Papers in Economics (2008)
Banking Efficiency in Transition Economies: The Role of Foreign Ownership
Laurent Weill.
Social Science Research Network (2003)
Bank Capital and Liquidity Creation: Granger-Causality Evidence
Roman Horváth;Jakub Seidler;Laurent Weill.
Journal of Financial Services Research (2014)
Does better governance foster efficiency? An aggregate frontier analysis
Pierre-Guillaume Méon;Laurent Weill.
Economics of Governance (2005)
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