1. Introduction
According to the Statistical Review of World Energy (70th edition) released by BP, by 2020 China’s carbon emissions will account for 30.3% of the global total [
1]. The success or failure of China’s energy conservation and emission reduction projects will affect the overall global carbon neutrality. On the other hand, environmental problems are difficult for many developing countries in the world to avoid during their development process. As a developing country with a huge economic volume, how China realizes green, low-carbon, and circular development will provide a model for the economic transformation of the latecomers. Some scholars estimate that in order to achieve the goal of “carbon peak”, the whole country needs to invest an additional CNY 3–4 trillion every year, with the fiscal revenue only meeting 10–15% of the capital gap [
2,
3], and investments should mainly rely on social financing. By the end of 2020, bank credit financing still accounted for 61% of total social financing. Therefore, green credit is the most important force affecting green finance in China. In fact, CIB Research estimates that green credit accounts for more than 90% of all green financing. (As of the first half of 2019, the green credit balance of China’s 21 major banks was CNY 10.6 trillion, and the balance of domestic green bonds was only CNY 708.78 billion. The bank mainly issued green financial bond funds to issue green credit. Excluding the green financial bonds, the balance of the non-financial enterprise green bonds was only CNY 293.96 billion, less than 3% of the green credit scale. The balances of the other green financing scales were smaller. (Source:
http://greenfinance.xinhua08.com/a/20191227/1905011.shtml (accessed on 16 March 2022))). On the other hand, since the beginning of the 21st century, China has faced the problem of environmental pollution during the process of the country’s development. The government has always emphasized environmental protection and sustainable development and has frequently introduced policies for industrial structure adjustments, but these policies have always achieved poor results [
4,
5,
6,
7]. In essence, the massive development of high energy consumption and heavy-pollution industries has benefited from large inflows of credit funds (based on the bank loan data of the listed enterprises, Liu Xiliang and Wen Shuyang (2019) also found that “six of the top ten industries with the amount of credit are highly polluting industries, and the average emission of the top ten industries with the amount of loan is about twice that of other industries”) [
8,
9]. The unbalanced allocation of credit resources objectively promotes the continuous expansion of industries with high rates of energy consumption and pollution and aggravates the environmental pollution and environmental costs incurred on the path towards economic growth. Therefore, the environmental problems caused by the industrial structure [
10,
11] can be attributed to the “financial mismatch” status of credit resources.
Therefore, green development must rely on optimizing the function of the financial allocation of resources, and green credit will be the most key link. In fact, the Chinese government has taken full action. For example, financial institutions, especially commercial banks, are asked to disclose environmental information, with banking financial institutions being required to regularly disclose financial information on their social and environmental responsibilities and on their support for energy conservation and emission reduction as well as to constantly refine their statistical standards for green credit information. In terms of financial discounts for eligible green credit, green credit and green bonds should become eligible collateral for re-lending by commercial banks. Local governments are also rolling out policies to support green finance. For example, Zhejiang province took the lead by issuing the Guiding Opinions on Financial Support to Achieve Peak Carbon Neutrality, established a positive list of credit supports for green and low-carbon development, and set up “zero carbon” pilot units and low-carbon industrial parks. In addition, a series of measures have been introduced, such as setting up carbon accounts for key enterprises and public institutions with carbon emissions and fostering regional environmental rights trading markets. Since 2016, Xiamen has offered different degrees of incentives, loan discounts, and risk-sharing compensation to the financial industry based on the scale of green credit.
The essence of green credit is to solve the externalities of the environment and finance for the green transformation of the economy. Its role in environmental protection is self-evident, and the relevant economic research focuses more on the market mechanism of green credit. In the short term, green development policies will have a certain impact on the national economy, especially in some traditional industries with high levels of pollution and energy consumption. For developing countries, such industries are the pillar of their national economy in the early stages of development. Additionally, the role of green credit through financial leverage has further increased the influence of this impact. On the other hand, the global economy is under downward pressure due to the impact of COVID-19, while it is also being buffeted by various extreme events that have severely affected financial stability. In this context, should we strengthen our confidence and further promote economic transformation with green credit? Are green credit policy incentives compatible in the market economy? Before answering these questions, we must further clarify the market operation mechanism of green credit. This paper studies the market logic of green credit from the perspective of Chinese commercial banks and tries to determine the long-term market effect of green credit from the starting point of whether green credit is in line with the interests of commercial banks.
2. Related Literature
The so-called green credit policy refers to a series of policies that allow commercial banks, policy banks, and other financial institutions to offer preferential interest rates for loans to enterprises or institutions that are engaged in ecological protection and the development and utilization of new sources of energy and that develop and produce anti-pollution facilities; meanwhile, the policy also includes a high, punishment interest rate that is implemented to limit loans for the investment and working capital of new projects carried out by polluting means of production and enterprises. The purpose is to guide the flow of funds and loans into the enterprises and institutions that promote the national environmental protection cause and to appropriately withdraw from the enterprises and projects that destroy and pollute the environment to realize the “green allocation” of funds [
12]. The capital allocation function of green credit means that the role of environmental governance can be carried out from the initial stages of the production process and can run through the whole production stage; that is, the incentive and restraint effect of green credit has the characteristics of initial governance and whole-cycle governance [
13]. The earliest official proposals for green credit date back to the early 1990s, when the United Nations Environmental Program Finance Initiative (UNEPFI) issued the “Statement by Financial Institutions on the Environment and Sustainable Development” [
14], which stressed the need to incorporate environmental factors into standard risk-assessment processes. Its main goal was to require the banking industry to consider environmental factors in its management activities and to encourage the private sector to invest in environmentally beneficial technologies and services. The Equator Principles, advocated for by the World Bank Group, provide a framework for environmental and social-risk assessment in project financing, including the risk classification of different types of projects, and list topics related to environmental assessment processes, monitoring, and follow-up guidance. At present, 56 financial institutions around the world, including Citigroup, Standard Chartered, and HSBC, have become Equator Principle Financial Institutions (“EPFIs”), accounting for more than 90% of the global project financing market. By the end of 2021, nine Chinese mainland commercial banks had incorporated the Equator Principles, which are also the practical blueprint for green credit in China’s banking industry (From the Preamble of the Equator Principles,
www.equator-principles.com (accessed on 16 March 2022)).
Much of the research on green credit is based on a corporate perspective. Chinese enterprises are usually highly dependent on external financing, and credit resources are the “blood” of enterprise development. There is a long-term “financial mismatch” in China, where financial resources are concentrated in state-owned enterprises, large enterprises, and hot industries [
15,
16], and the enterprises with high levels of pollution and energy consumption mentioned above are mainly subject to government intervention [
17,
18] and credit rationing [
19,
20]. The green credit policy tries to change this “financial mismatch” phenomenon by introducing high-pollution investment into higher financing constraints and by internalizing the negative externality of corporate pollution emissions, thus having a profound impact on China’s industrial patterns.
From the implementation effect, there is a lot of evidence that green credit boosts the green and high-quality development of the economy. For enterprises in high-polluting industries, the green credit policy significantly reduces the credit financing of enterprises in heavy-polluting industries, which not only redirects the resources from low-efficiency enterprises to high-efficiency enterprises [
21], but also promotes the green innovation in high-polluting enterprises [
13,
22]. Green credit has a significant effect on reducing the friction costs and risk coefficients in various industries [
23]. On the other hand, the national conditions result in green credit having policy effects that cause enterprises to show certain Chinese characteristics. For example, the credit-approval features of Chinese commercial banks that emphasize mortgages [
24] cause green credit policies to have less of an impact on highly polluting enterprises with high fixed assets [
25]. Sun et al. [
26] found that green credit policies can motivate Chinese enterprises to focus on front-end prevention and control rather than on terminal emission reduction.
The research results on the impact of green credit on commercial banks are divided. Many scholars believe that green credit has a positive effect on commercial banks. First, the implementation of a green credit policy can improve the social image of commercial banks from the perspectives of media attention and recognition from customers, employees, and partners. For example, more social reports on green credit [
27] and the disclosure of public announcements [
28] can enable commercial banks to gain more public trust by improving their reputation. In contrast, there is evidence that commercial banks regard some major polluting enterprises as important loan-provision objects that will affect their green reputation, lead to the loss of high-quality customer resources, and result in reductions and fluctuations in the financial performance level [
29]. Second, the implantation of a green policy can reduce the environmental risks of the loan customer. In the literature, environmental risk generally includes climate risk and environmental-regulation risk. China’s current credit resources flow into industries with high energy consumption, high pollution, and excess capacity (hereinafter referred to as the “Two High and One Surplus”) [
8,
9]; this process makes the value of the credit assets of commercial banks more sensitive to environmental regulations, energy price fluctuations, and market demand changes. There is evidence that green credit can effectively reduce the probability of loan losses caused by environmental regulations [
30,
31]. Climate risk affects the ability for loans to be repaid by changing the business cash flow of borrowers [
32].
Scholars with the opposite point of view believe that green credit increases business costs (Ma and Liu, 2013; Hu and Zhang, 2016) and squeezes out the “Two High and One Surplus” loans (Chen and Lu, 2011). Even the decision by commercial banks to adopt the Equator Principles will bring a double blow to operating costs and profits (Scholtens and Dam, 2007). However, Maya et al. (Finger and Gavious et al., 2018) showed that most of these results occurred in developing countries, while the situation was reversed in developed countries. The study of Cao Junxin and Yao Bin (Cao and Yao, 2014) found that carbon emission reduction measures would reduce industry profits and affect the quality of bank credit assets.
Scholars who hold a neutral view emphasize case-by-case analysis. The impact of green credit on commercial banks is moderated by several factors, such as bank size: large banks have advantages such as cost amortization and customer resources and can benefit more from increasing the proportion of green credit [
33]. However, the research results of Zhang Lin and Lian Yonghui [
34] are in contrast to this. Tong Menghua et al. [
35] believe that commercial banks will lose customers due to “one-size-fits-all” carbon emission reduction policies and advocate for the establishment of a “carbon emission reduction credit risk warning system for industrial enterprises” to ensure that commercial banks can maximize their interests when implementing green credit policies.
In terms of methods, most of the research in the literature takes the financial index of commercial banks as the explained variable and the proportion of green credit as the core explanatory variable to establish panel data linear regression. In terms of the explained variables, many scholars take return on total assets as the explained variable [
34,
36]. Some scholars have also used self-built comprehensive indexes as the explained variables, such as the bank competitiveness index [
37] or the comprehensive evaluation index [
38,
39].
The relevant literature not only analyzes the positive effects of green credit policies on commercial banks from the perspectives of social responsibility and environmental risks, but also points out the negative effects of green credit policies from the aspects of increased costs and customer loss. Most research methods use return on assets or comprehensive financial indicators as the explained variables and the core of green credit as an accounted-for explained variable in a controlled variable linear regression series. These rich research methods and empirical conclusions allow us not only to further explore the green financial market mechanism and to lay a solid foundation, but also to leave space for further research, with potential avenues of research including updating the data, as most of China’s green credit research data are from 2017 and are related to commercial banks. The existing green credit data imperfectly disclose regulations, meaning that free disclosure exists in terms of disclosing the green credit data of commercial banks. Thus, due to the lack-of-interruption phenomenon, it is difficult to update the data. Additionally, 2016 represents the first year of green finance in China, and the data from subsequent years are more meaningful. The sample size needs to be expanded. Additionally, due to limited relevant information regarding disclosure regulation defects, the vast majority of the literature is limited to listed companies that disclose their data to commercial banks, and most banks and some influential city businesses come to the market late. This not only causes under-represented defects, but also partly explains the use of the same methods in the literature; however, different results have been achieved, and the three research methods need to be enriched. The return on assets or return on equity is taken as the explained variable, and its fluctuation is easily affected by changes in the asset structure (for example, the return on assets decreases due to capital and stock increases). However, most of the studies in the literature do not control this variable, resulting in differences in the research conclusions. A single income index fails to fully describe the operation of commercial banks, while the comprehensive indicator method fails to grasp the phased coordination under multiple objectives (for example, when the non-performing loan ratio is low, the pursuit of the maximum return rate is a more important goal).
This paper will make adjustments to the above points, try to explain the differences in the conclusions of previous studies, and analyze the effect of green credit on commercial banks from the two angles of financial results and operation efficiency. The research in this paper mainly analyzes the theoretical analysis of the two types of innovation. (1) When analyzing the theory, there is a distinct lack of research on the impact mechanism in most of the literature, with most studies establishing a regression model of the financial indicators of green credit and commercial banks and discussing the effects of green credit policies on the financial performance of commercial banks from the empirical results of the model. In contrast, we have carried out a full research methodology on the impact mechanism: on the one hand, it reveals that the characteristics of green credit, “low risk and high income”, are important mechanisms for improving the business situation of commercial banks. On the other hand, combined with the conclusions in the literature and of the financial analyses, different index types affect the modeling results, with the modeling results pointing out that capital expansion is too fast and that the decline in the efficiency of internal resources is the main reason for the decline in asset yields and that green credit policies can help improve the “overcapacity” in commercial banks. (2) In the empirical analysis, this paper establishes a data envelope analysis model with undesirable output and dynamically analyzes the operation efficiency of commercial banks in China, innovatively proving the argument through the utilization and efficient configuration of internal resources.
The rest of this paper is organized as follows:
Section 3 covers the financial comparison between “green enterprises” and “Two High and One Surplus” enterprises;
Section 4 covers the differences between different models;
Section 5 discusses the operating efficiency of Chinese commercial banks;
Section 6 describes the impact of green credit on the operational efficiency of commercial banks;
Section 7 provides a discussion on the endogeneity and robustness tests; and
Section 8 comprises the summary of the present research and provides policy suggestions.
4. Do Green Credit Policies Boost Profits?
In the last section, the financial data for green industries and the “Two High and One Surplus” industries were compared, and the reasons for the differences between these two types of industries were analyzed to build a theoretical basis for how green credit policies affect the asset management of commercial banks. However, according to the literature, relevant empirical analyses have failed to find a relatively consistent answer to the question of whether increasing green credit can have positive effects on commercial banks. This paper will continue to try to explain the differences in the conclusions from the literature through empirical analysis and will put forward inferences based on facts.
4.1. Description of the Data, Variables, and Models
The study period was from 2007 to 2020 and included 2016, the first year of green finance in China; the global financial crisis in 2008; and the COVID-19 outbreak in 2019. Sample banks included 43 types of large state-owned commercial banks, national joint-stock commercial banks, urban commercial banks, and rural commercial banks (including non-listed banks). During the sample period, the selected banks were very representative in terms of the proportion of deposit balance (69.2–80.5%) and loan balance (71.4–74.7%) for the whole industry. From the perspective of green credit data, as of 2016 the green credit balance of the sample banks accounted for 77% of the whole industry (the CBRC has only released green credit statistics from 2013 to 2016). The relevant financial data, green credit, and operational data from commercial banks were collected manually from their official websites and from their annual reports and social responsibility reports.
4.2. Different Models Have Different Results
The empirical analyses that have been carried out in the literature use the relative index—return on total assets (ROA) or return on equity (ROE)—as the explained variable. The value of the relative index is easily affected by the financing behavior of commercial banks. For example, capital expansion increases the denominator of the relative index. In order to further confirm that, this paper will compare the modeling results of the absolute index and the relative index, respectively. The explained variable of the absolute index model is the natural logarithm of net profit, and the core explanatory variable is the natural logarithm of green credit. The relative index model corresponds to return on total assets (or return on equity) and the ratio of green credit corresponds to the total loan scale. The control variables include macro indicators, such as GDP, interest rates, and exchange rates, and industrial indicators, such as the average net interest margin, market concentration, asset size, age (from the beginning of its establishment), and income cost ratio (operating efficiency). The descriptive statistics of these variables are in
Table 1. Using the F Test, it can be found that the F statistics in
Table 2 (line “F-test”) significantly reject the null hypothesis that there is no fixed effect; so, the fixed-effect model is superior to the mixed-effect model. Using the Hausman test (“Hausman (
p value)”), it is found that the fixed-effect models are mostly superior to the random-effect models. Therefore, the fixed-effect model of individual characteristics is established as follows:
The is the explained variable of the relative index model, namely the ROA or ROE; corresponds to the explained variable of the absolute index model, namely the natural logarithm of net profit. LnGreenLoanit and GreenLoanRateit are the natural logarithm of green credit and the proportion of green credit in the total loan, respectively. . and are random disturbance terms. and are individual fixed effects.
A simple comparison of the empirical results (
Table 2) shows that the conclusions drawn by the relative indicator model (Model 1–2) and the absolute indicator model (Model 7–9) are quite different. Under the relative indicator model, the increase in the proportion of green credit inhibits the financial performance of commercial banks, while the conclusion drawn by the absolute indicator model is just the opposite. This contrast may be led by the rapid expansion of the total assets (denominator) in the relative index. Before 2007, only 7 of the 43 banks in the sample had been listed. The vast majority of Chinese commercial banks were listed in succession during the sample period. The business scale of Chinese commercial banks is largely constrained by the asset management of the regulatory authorities. When the financing channel of the stock market is opened, commercial banks resolve the asset management constraints one after another by expanding the share capital to further promote the expansion of the asset scale. During the sample period, the average annual growth rate of the net assets of the sample banks was as high as 27.46%, while the corresponding growth rate of the net profits was only 18%. On the one hand, rapid capital expansion has diluted the return on average assets, causing the total profit and the proportion of green credit in China’s banking industry in this special period to increase while causing the return on average assets and net assets to decline. On the other hand, the excessive expansion of assets and the scale of business may lead to a decline in the operating efficiency of commercial banks (this argument will be proved below).
Considering the interactive influence of their own asset scale (Model 3), the financial effect of the proportion of green credit is differentiated: banks with a lower asset scale than average (CNY 810.1 billion) are more likely to realize the positive effects of green credit. On the one hand, under certain conditions, green credit policies are conducive to alleviating the decline in operating efficiency caused by the excessive capital expansion of Chinese commercial banks. On the other hand, it has been proven that sample selection plays an important role in the model results. Different studies in the literature have selected different sample individuals and sample periods, and the average asset size of those selected samples has also been different, causing different conclusions to be drawn.
4.3. Cost Margin of Green Credit
According to the above analysis, the excessive capital expansion of Chinese commercial banks may lead to a decline in operating efficiency. Increasing green credit not only improves the operating profits, but also alleviates the problems caused by excessive capital expansion to a certain extent. In order to further verify and explore the relationship between green credit policies and the operation efficiency of commercial banks, this paper studies whether and how increasing green credit affects the operation of commercial banks by establishing elastic green credit models and input and output from the perspective of internal resource utilization efficiency:
, the input variable, represents the management costs; the number of employees and the number of business outlets are selected as the corresponding input variables, which are the explained variables taken from the natural logarithm. is the logarithm of the amount of green credit, represents a series of the control variables, and is the random interference term. In order to compare the costs and benefits of green credit, the natural logarithm of the net profit is added to the explained variable. In this paper, the individual fixed effect was used for regression analysis.
The results of Model 9–11 (in
Table 3) support the view that “an increase in the proportion of green credit will increase business costs”. Many scholars, such as He Dexu and Zhang Xuelan [
46], believe that green credit increases the management costs incurred by project identification in the credit process of commercial banks, such as via project evaluation by external experts and targeted staff training, etc. Model 9 verifies this view. Model 10 and Model 11 show that increasing the amount of green credit not only significantly increases the management cost, but also promotes increasing the number of staff and outlets. Specifically, when the green credit ratio increases by 1%, costs rise by an average of 0.05%. Compared to the increase in cost, green credit also significantly improves net profit, and the coefficient is slightly higher than the increase in cost, which indicates that the increase in green credit business may bring income to commercial banks that is twice the increase in cost. This further shows that green credit businesses are more efficient in using cost inputs than traditional credit businesses.
So far, we have proved Hypothesis 1; that is, green credit policies improve the operating profits of commercial banks. In addition, it was determined that compared to general loans, green credit also significantly increases the cost input of commercial banks. In order to further analyze the mechanism influencing green credit policies and to combine with the conclusions that have already been obtained, this paper puts forward Hypothesis 2:
Hypothesis 2 (H2). Increasing the proportion of green credit will improve the operating efficiency of commercial banks by improving the utilization rate and allocation efficiency of internal resources.
5. The Operation Efficiency of Commercial Banks
According to the conclusions of
Section 4, excessive capital expansion speed may lead to a decrease in the internal resource allocation efficiency of Chinese commercial banks and improving the green credit ratio not only pushes up the business costs of banks, it also creates several times more profit. These findings provide market evidence for green credit policies improving the operational efficiency of commercial banks, but these findings only support this inference from the results, and there is a lack of systematic and dynamic discussion on the principles and processes. Is the rate at which the assets of commercial banks are expanding really reasonable? Is there an optimal asset size or allocation structure for internal resources? Additionally, can increasing green credit have an impact on the resource allocation efficiency of commercial banks? The answers to these questions are the key to further exploring how green credit policies affect the operational efficiency of commercial banks. This requires us to analyze the relationship between green credit policies and the operational efficiency of commercial banks, not only from the perspective of the operating results, but also from the perspective of the operating processes. In view of this, this paper will take the input–output efficiency as the starting point to explore the impact of changes in the proportion of green credit on business efficiency and will carry out research from a more comprehensive perspective.
Here, input–output efficiency refers to the concept of technical efficiency in economics; that is, under certain technical conditions, when it is impossible to increase any output without reducing other output, or it is impossible to reduce any input without increasing other input, then the input–output is technically efficient [
53]. Therefore, technical efficiency refers to the utilization level of the existing technology. Common influencing factors include the quality of the workers and the management level. Farrell [
54] used production frontier analysis to measure technical efficiency for the first time, which was widely recognized by the theoretical circle of researchers and became the basis of the efficiency measurements. The so-called production frontier refers to the maximum output set corresponding to various proportional inputs at a certain technical level. The core of production, frontier analysis, is the effective frontier, that is, analysis in the form of the production function. In terms of methods, it includes parametric analysis with a specific function form and a non-parametric method without a specific function form. The former is represented by stochastic frontier analysis (SFA) and parametric metafrontier analysis. The latter is represented by data envelope analysis (DEA).
DEA is a non-parametric analysis method that was first proposed by A. Charnes, W.W. Cooper, and E. Rhodes [
55] in 1978 and was developed on the basis of evaluating relative efficiency. As a non-parametric analysis, DEA can calculate the efficiency value without setting the specific function form of production, which has a wide range of applications. In the process of analyzing the input–output efficiency of commercial banks, it is difficult to find an effective functional form between input (such as staff and outlets) and output (such as net profit). Therefore, this paper adopts the DEA method to analyze the operating efficiency of commercial banks (if it is a functional form, then net profit is the explained variable, and the number of employees and outlets is the explanatory variable. It should be considered whether there is an optimal proportion between employees and outlets, which often varies greatly for different types of commercial banks in different regions, and this optimal proportion often varies over time. Therefore, insufficient degrees of freedom should be considered during parameter estimation).
Sherman and Gold [
56] were the first to apply DEA to banking efficiency, and later scholars followed their methods [
57,
58,
59]. A key to measuring the operational efficiency of commercial banks with DEA is to identify the input and output. There are three main classification methods: production methods, asset methods, and intermediary methods. Production methods view banks as general productive enterprises. The input production factors mainly include employees, machinery and equipment, capital, etc., and the output factors include deposits and loans. According to the intermediary method, the bank is the medium of borrowing and lending; that is, it produces the absorbed deposits as loans, and other inputs also include human resources, financial resources, material resources, and other elements. For the property method, the index classification is closely related to the balance sheet. The input index is the liability item, and the output is the asset item. The amount of a loan is often taken as the most important output indicator, while deposits can be classified differently. Other indicators, such as manpower, equipment assets, and capital input, generally appear in the form of input factors.
The DEA model is essentially a target optimization problem under a given constraint. As a modern enterprise, the ultimate goal is undoubtedly to pursue profit maximization rather than to maximize the loan amount. In fact, commercial banks expand the size of deposits and loans to maximize their total profit by increasing the scale. The classification methods for deposits are the input, and loans are the output, showing how commercial banks continue to consider debt management similarly to how it was considered in the 1960s and 1970s. This paper does not take loans as output and instead replaces them with net profit. Considering the importance of the asset security of commercial banks to the financial system and even to the national economy, we added the non-performing loan rate as an undesirable output to the optimization target. In fact, trade-offs between safety and profitability often occur; so, commercial bank managers and regulators need to make two-goal trade-offs. In practice, commercial banks have different priorities for different goals in different periods. For example, in a period when the non-performing loan ratio is lower than 1%, it is more important to improve the net profit level than to further reduce the non-performing loan ratio, while the opposite is true when the non-performing loan ratio is higher than 5%. In view of this, we considered a multi-objective weight problem for dynamic intertarget trade-offs at different risk levels.
5.1. Theory and Methods
In this paper, the directional distance function (DDF) was used to measure the input–output efficiency.
x represents the inputs, and the outputs are divided into desirable outputs
y and non-desirable outputs
b. The production possibility set is:
and the corresponding non-radial DDF is
,) is the direction of improvement, and
is the adjustment amount for the input–output that is not limited by a fixed proportion. Based on the studies related to SBM-DDF [
60,
61,
62], we also dynamically set the weights w of the inputs and outputs in the objective function. It was transformed into a linear programming problem using panel data with an individual number J and time dimension Γ (assuming the same scale remuneration production mode, variable scale remuneration only needs to add convexity conditions):
In the above expression, the letter with lower indices is a scalar value, and the letter without lower indices is a vector. In accordance with the above, x, y, and b represent input, desirable output, and undesirable output, respectively. ,) and ,) are the adjustment directions and adjustment quantities of these three variables, respectively; , and are the relaxation variables representing the three variables, respectively; is the λ value (intensity variable) of the Jth DMU at time τ.
The setting of the efficient reference frame, namely the effective frontier, is crucial. The effective frontier is usually divided into the biennial, sequential, and global frontiers in the scope of time. The main difference lies in the period range of data used to determine the effective frontier. It corresponds to the data from the previous two years and to the sequential and sample data for the whole period. In order to facilitate the efficiency comparison in different periods, this paper adopts the global SBM-DDF.
5.2. Variable Selection and Data Description
In this paper, a production method is adopted, and the number of employees, the number of business organizations, the fixed assets, and the other input variables are adopted as output indicators. According to the above analysis, net profit is used to replace the amount of deposits and loans as the desirable output (the larger the better), and the non-performing loan ratio is taken as the undesirable output. Considering multi-objective dynamic coordination, this paper dynamically adjusts the weight of the non-performing loan ratio and the net profit output. The weight of the net profit is set as 1, and the weight of the non-performing loan ratio is dynamically adjusted according to the actual situation. The specific method is as follows: first, work out the average value of the non-performing loan ratio for all of the sample banks each year. The dynamic weight adjustment rule of the non-performing loan ratio is as follows: if the non-performing loan ratio is less than the average value, the weight is 0.2; if the ratio is greater than average, but less than 5%, then the weight is 0.6; if the ratio is greater than 5%, the weight is set to 1 (during the sample period, the average was 1.36%m, with a minimum of 0.76 and a maximum of 2.27%, never exceeding 5%). The descriptive statistics of these variables are in
Table 4.
5.3. Analysis of Business Efficiency
The non-radial distance was obtained. The smaller the value of the distance, the closer it is to the corresponding effective point and the higher the efficiency value. The non-radial distance between the points on the efficiency boundary was 0. For better understanding, this distance was further normalized by means of min-max normalization, resulting in an efficiency score of 0–100, with higher scores resulting in greater efficiency. Another result of the SBM model is the slack variable. The slack variable is the amount of each input (or output) variable that should be reduced (increased) when the efficiency is improved. Therefore, the smaller the slack variable of a factor is, the higher the utilization efficiency of the factor is (the relaxation variable of the non-satisfactory output refers to the number of efficiency improvements that should be reduced).
Overall, as we can see in
Figure 4, the operating efficiency of Chinese commercial banks has declined since they reached their peak in 2011.This is consistent with the previous discussion on how “excessive capital expansion leads to a decline in operating efficiency”. In 2008–2011, the efficiency scores rose rapidly as each slack variable declined (in order to increase the comparability between different slack variables, this paper represents the change rates in the slack variables. The larger the change rate, the lower the factor efficiency corresponding to the slack variable). It can be seen that the most important force leading this wave of operational efficiency improvements is the sharp increase in net profit, which is closely related to rapid economic recovery in the post-financial crisis, and a good economy promotes the improvement of the utilization efficiency of various input factors. During the period of 2011–2017, the overall operating efficiency gradually decreased. In terms of slack variables, the efficiency of all of the inputs and outputs shows varying degrees of decline during this period, and the most obvious feature is the decline in the control efficiency of the non-performing loan ratio. All of the indicators showed a brief small rally in 2017–2019. Affected by the COVID-19 epidemic, the operating efficiency in 2020 showed a sharp decline. As seen from the figure, the most important reason for this comes from the rapid decline in net profits.
On the other hand, compared to other inputs, the inefficient use of fixed assets and business outlets is more prominent and has existed for a long time. Among them, the number of business outlets before 2009 was the minimum efficiency investment, which is consistent with the conclusion of the research performed by Wang Bing and Zhu Ning [
63]. The rate at which personnel are utilized and the management expenses gradually converge, a phenomenon that can be explained by saying that the efficiency of management expenses is gradually determined by how efficiently employees are used. The biggest factor causing the fluctuations in the overall operating efficiency is the substantial adjustments in net profit, followed by the non-performing loan ratio.
From the perspective of different types of commercial banks(in
Figure 5), the operating efficiency of large state-owned banks has risen to the highest level in the industry through a series of measures such as capital injection, bad debt stripping, shareholding reform, among others. These measures have resulted in strong national joint-stock commercial banks. In contrast, the city commercial banks cannot compete with the national banks due to the restrictions of their operating areas, and they have to compete with rural commercial banks for tight regional resources, resulting in the operating efficiency declining. Rural commercial banks have a low level of operating efficiency. The efficiency stratification of different types of banks is basically consistent with the study of Li Lifang et al. [
64]. From the perspective of commercial banks in different regions, the economic environment plays a significant role in dividing them into different efficiency categories (in
Figure 6). Commercial banks in the east have the highest operating efficiency, other than national banks, and the operating efficiency of commercial banks in the central and western regions is low.
8. Conclusions and Policy Recommendations
8.1. Conclusions
According to the development status, the Chinese government must further promote green credit policies to finance green economic development. However, in the context of a weak global economy, such economic transformation may face the risks and challenges of a further decline in the domestic economy. With such doubts, from the perspective of commercial banks, this paper tries to clarify the market logic of green credit policies and explore whether green credit policies conform to the long-term market mechanism.
Section 3 analyzes the financial status and credit financing costs of two types of loan customers (the enterprises in the environmental protection industry and the “Two High and One Surplus” enterprises), corresponding to a green credit policy that is based on the financial information of the loan customers. It was found that green enterprises have a better financial status and less risk but higher credit financing costs than the “Two High and One Surplus” enterprises. On the one hand, the pricing differences between the capital market and the credit market regarding the financing costs of green enterprises result from the monopoly that commercial banks have in the credit market. On the other hand, commercial banks benefit from the implementation of green credit policies. The financial comparison lays an important theoretical foundation for demonstrating how green credit policies affect the operation of commercial banks.
Section 4 closely combines previous research from the literature and the content of the first part of the paper through regression analysis and studies the influence of increasing the ratio of green credit to the operating results of commercial banks (namely, financial indicators). It is pointed out that the differences in conclusions from the literature are due to the selection of model variables. The root cause of these differences may be the rapid expansion of the capital of commercial banks in the sample period, resulting in a decline in the internal factor allocation efficiency. The empirical analysis proves that increasing the green credit ratio can increase the total profits of commercial banks and puts forward that green credit policies can solve the “overcapacity” problems that are experienced by commercial banks to a certain extent.
Section 5 analyzes the allocation efficiency of the internal resources of commercial banks from the perspective of input–output efficiency to prepare for the fourth part of the study. In terms of methods, an SBM-DEA model containing undesirable output (the non-performing loan ratio) was established, and the weights of the output variables were innovatively and dynamically coordinated. The results show that the efficiency measurements for China’s commercial banks largely conform to the economic reality, and the analysis of the slack variables effectively revealed the main reasons for the changes in the operating efficiency of commercial banks at various stages.
Section 6 uses the operating efficiency and slack variables obtained in the third part of the paper to study the influence of increasing the proportion of green credit on the operation processes (operating efficiency) of commercial banks. It was found that green credit policies mainly improve the overall operating efficiency of commercial banks from two aspects: (1) it improves the utilization efficiency of various internal resources, and (2) it improves the overall allocation efficiency of resources.
At the end of this paper, the possible endogeneity and robustness of the model were discussed and tested. We considered possible endogeneity problems such as omitted variables and non-random samples, and instrumental variables and Heckman’s two-stage method were used to test and adjust the model. It was found that it is the model that has mild endogeneity that underestimates the promotion effect of the green credit policy on the operational efficiency of commercial banks to some extent. For a robustness test, the influence of the weight rule changes on the research conclusions was tested by objective function reconstruction, and no significant differences were found in the conclusions.
8.2. Policy Recommendations
Based on the research in this paper, we can provide the following three policy suggestions:
First, commercial banks should continue to promote green credit policies. This paper has proven that increasing the proportion of green credit can not only increase the net profit of commercial banks effectively and reduce the non-performing loan ratio, but it can also make full use of their internal resources and improve the overall operating efficiency. Under the current situation of a transition in industry competition, excessive capital expansion, and a high idle rate of resources, Chinese commercial banks should further promote the implementation of green credit policies, improve overall asset profitability, and promote the optimal allocation of internal resources.
Second, from the perspective of the green industry, regulatory authorities should be committed to reducing the pricing differences between different financing markets and to solving the problems of “expensive financing” of green projects in a market-oriented way. The different financing pricing for green industries in the stock market and in the credit market stems from the monopoly that commercial banks have in the credit market, and the unequal competition relationship is determined by comparing the huge volume of credit financing and equity financing. Therefore, we suggest expanding the equity financing channels of green industry so that the equity market information can be transmitted to the credit market more effectively. On the other hand, differences in financing pricing may also result from the sensitivity of different markets to information asymmetry. When financing green projects, commercial banks require a higher risk premium for uncertainty. Therefore, a credit guarantee mechanism can be designed to reduce the cost of uncertainty.
From the perspective of finance, the government should gradually reduce green financial subsidies in coordination with supporting policies and measures. This paper has proven that the green credit policies of commercial banks are in line with their own market interests, laying a theoretical and factual basis for the withdrawal of fiscal subsidies. However, attention should be paid to the reaction of the market when withdrawing fiscal subsidies, and various policies and orderly withdrawal methods should be implemented. For example, due to the dominant position of commercial banks in green credit approval, they may transfer the cost increases caused by the abolition of fiscal discounts to enterprises applying for green credit by increasing interest rates. In this regard, regulators can provide two types of supporting measures: on the one hand, they can increase the benefits of green credit issued by commercial banks through policies, such as by supporting securing green credit; on the other hand, there should be more alternative financing channels for green projects to weaken the monopoly that commercial banks have on the financing market. At the same time, market monitoring mechanisms should be added, such as the establishment of a green credit financing index to monitor market reactions to fiscal cuts in real time.