Peer Pressure, Information Technology Adoption, and Bank Performance

Authors

  • Md Al Mamun La Trobe Business School, La Trobe University, Australia
  • Mahfuja Malik Department of Accounting and Information Systems, College of Business and Technology, Sacred Heart University, United States
  • Md Abdul Hannan Mia Department of Management Information System, Faculty of Business Studies, Dhaka University, Bangladesh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22452/ajba.vol16no1.6

Keywords:

Cross-sectional dependence, IT adoption, Peer pressure, Bank profitability

Abstract

Manuscript type: Research paper
Research aims: The study examines cross-sectional dependence among banks to invest in information technology-related assets. We also analyse the short- and long-term impacts of information technology (IT) adoption on banks’ profitability and the variations in effects between early and late adopters.
Design/Methodology/Approach: The study uses autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) with dynamic fixed approach, standard fixed-effect ordinary least square and random effect model with double clustering regressions.
Research findings: The study finds a positive effect of peer pressure on a bank’s investment in IT assets. It also documents that IT adoption reduces short-term profitability, but the joint effect of early adoption increases both short- and long-term profitability.
Theoretical contribution/Originality: The study contributes to the banking and technology adoption literature by showing the evidence on a positive and significant effect of peer pressure on IT adoption.
Practitioner/Policy implications: The findings are significant for the banking sector’s policy makers in emerging economies.
Research limitation: The findings may not be applicable in the context of a developed economy with a strong IT infrastructure.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

30-06-2023

How to Cite

Md Al Mamun, Mahfuja Malik, & Md Abdul Hannan Mia. (2023). Peer Pressure, Information Technology Adoption, and Bank Performance. Asian Journal of Business and Accounting, 16(1), 161–191. https://doi.org/10.22452/ajba.vol16no1.6

Issue

Section

Articles