Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to examine whether income diversification moderates the relationship between human capital and bank performance.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses a sample of 53 banks and panel data for the years 2010–2018. The hypotheses are tested through hierarchical multiple regression and the choice between fixed effect and random effect estimation is based on the results of the Hausman test.FindingsThe study finds that human capital and income diversification significantly influence bank performance; however, the direction of the causality varies. While human capital has a positive effect, income diversification has a negative effect. Additionally, the interaction term has a negative and significant effect on bank performance, inferring that income diversification has an antagonistic effect on the human capital and bank performance relationship. For the control variable, liquidity and asset quality negatively affects bank performance while capitalization has a positive effect.Research limitations/implicationsHuman capital was measured as human capital efficiency (HCE), which is a quantitative measure of human capital, hence future studies can use qualitative measures. Also, the study focused on commercial banks in East Africa, future researcher may possibly consider other regions and industries, which would shed more insights.Practical implicationsThe results of this paper provide valuable insights. Bank managers can get a better understanding of the impact of human capital on bank performance, and the need to invest more in human capital development. Further, the study cautions bank managers that engaging in non-lending activities might destroy the economic value of human capital and ultimately lower performance. The study also recommends that policymakers should address the obstacles to banks' income diversification, for instance relaxing regulations restricting diversification; this might enable banks to leverage related financial service activities for optimal utilization of human capital and improve banks' profitability.Originality/valueWhile a good number of previous studies investigated the direct effect of human capital and income diversification on the performance of banks, this study examines the moderating role of income diversification on the relationship between human capital and performance of banks in East Africa.

Highlights

  • Firms depend on both tangible and intangible assets for sustained competitive advantage and long run survival

  • The high SD of 0.02 indicates that the selected banks have a high variation in their financial performance

  • The mean score of human capital is 2.87, suggesting that East African banks create an average of 2.87 monetary units for every one monetary unit invested in human resources

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Summary

Introduction

Firms depend on both tangible and intangible assets for sustained competitive advantage and long run survival. In the present era of information and knowledge-based economies, intangible assets, intellectual capital (IC) are gradually replacing physical capital as critical factors of production and as drivers of sustained long-term profitability (Drucker, 1993; Clarke and Gholamshahi, 2018). This is true for knowledgeintensive service organizations, banks since they are highly innovative and. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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