Internal and External Factors of Non-performing Loans: The Example of the Banking Sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Authors

  • Almir Alihodžić Faculty of Economics, University of Zenica, 72000 Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31410/Balkans.JETSS.2022.5.2.93-104

Keywords:

Non-performing loans, Unemployment rate, Provisions to non-performing loans, Fixed effect model, Random effect model, Return on equity

Abstract

Non-performing loans are loans that do not generate income for banks and represent one of the most sensitive categories of a bank’s balance sheet. Their increase can affect both the liquidity and the solvency of banks. This paper investigates internal (specific) and external (macroeconomic) determinants of non-performing loans of the banking sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina for the period 2008: Q1 - 2020: Q4 including correlation and regression analysis. The results of the research showed that the following independent variables have the strongest impact on non-performing loans as a dependent variable: unemployment rate, provisions to non-performing loans, and real GDP growth rate. On the other hand, the independent variable return on equity had the weakest impact on non-performing loans.

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Published

2022-12-30

How to Cite

Alihodžić, A. (2022). Internal and External Factors of Non-performing Loans: The Example of the Banking Sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Balkans Journal of Emerging Trends in Social Sciences, 5(2), 93–104. https://doi.org/10.31410/Balkans.JETSS.2022.5.2.93-104