Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Why are banks’ asset–liability decisions interdependent, and why do we observe both large and small banks? We introduce convex costs in a model with both horizontal and vertical quality differentiation, finding that, as long as a single bank spends on quality attributes, strategic quality rivalry causes the portfolio decisions of all banks to be interconnected, generating portfolio interdependence regarding choices among assets and liabilities at each bank, including banks that forego vertical quality provision. In addition, diseconomies of scale allow banks to remain profitable at different scales of operations.