This book shows how deregulation is transforming the size, structure, and geographic range of U.S. banks, the scope of banking services, and the nature of bank-customer relationships. Over the past two decades the characteristics that had made American banks different from other banks throughout the world--a fragmented geographical structure of the industry, which restricted the scale of banks and their ability to compete with one another, and strict limits on the kinds of products and services commercial banks could offer--virtually have been eliminated. Understanding the origins and persistence of the unique banking regulations that defined U.S. banking for over a century lends an important perspective on the economic and political causes and consequences of the current process of deregulation.
Charles W. Calomiris is the Arthur F. Burns Scholar in Economics at AEI.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction
Chapter 1: Regulation, industrial structure, and instability in U.S. banking: An historical perspective Chapter 2: The origins of banking panics: Models, facts, and bank regulation Chapter 3: The origins of federal deposit insurance Chapter 4: The costs of rejecting universal banking: American finance in the German mirror Chapter 5: The evolution of market structure, information, and spreads in American investment banking Chapter 6: Universal banking, "American style"
In Rethinking Federal Housing Policy: How to Make Housing Plentiful and Affordable, Edward L. Glaeser and Joseph Gyourko explain why housing is so expensive in some areas and outline a plan for making it more affordable. They propose a comprehensive overhaul of federal housing policy that takes into account local regulations and economic conditions.
Should Medicare pay for patient expenses the way automobile insurers pay for car-repair bills? In How to Fix Medicare, health economist Roger Feldman argues that a radical shift in Medicare policy is not only possible but imperative.