| dc.description.abstract | 
According to the findings of this study, the profitability of Ghanaian rural 
banks in Ghana is being investigated. The rural bank's return on assets (ROA) 
and return on equity (ROE) are two of the most significant measures of 
profitability (ROE). Analysis includes an extra set of independent factors, 
including the size and quality of the bank's branch network, as well as the 
bank's capital adequacy and liquidity. Five years of panel data from five rural 
banks in Ghana's Upper East area are used to explore fixed and random effect 
models for fixed effect models. The Ghanaian Central Bank provides the 
statistics. Among the macroeconomic variables considered in this research are 
GDP, inflation and interest rates, as well as the currency rate. The profitability 
of the five banks studied (2014 to 2018) changes during this time, according to 
the report. As measured by ROAs, Ghanaian rural banks' capital adequacy 
ratio and operational efficiency have the greatest impact on their profitability, 
according to the study's findings (ROA). There is no correlation between rural 
bank profitability (ROA and ROE) as measured by macroeconomic factors 
(interest rate, inflation rate, exchange rate, GDP growth rate) and rural bank 
profitability (ROA and ROE). A growing economy, according to the findings 
of the research, will lead to increased profits for banks, which will in turn 
benefit the government | 
en_US |