The Financial Services Revolution, 1988
Policy Directions for the Future

Innovations in Financial Markets and Institutions Series, Vol. 1

Coordinators: England Catherine, Huertas Thomas F.

Language: English
Cover of the book The Financial Services Revolution

Subjects for The Financial Services Revolution

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368 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback
In Chapter 5, William Shughart also considers the part that politics played in banking legislation during the 1930s, but he looks at the banking legislation passed in the United States. Shughart draws par­ ticular attention to the provisions in the Banking Act of 1933 that required the separation of commercial and investment banking activ­ ities. Applying a public choice analysis, Shughart asks who gained from the provisions, and he concludes that the commercial banking industry, the investment banking industry, and the U. S. Treasury Department can all be said to have benefited in the years immedi­ ately following the passage of the act. Richard Timberlake, in his comment, extends Shughart's analysis to show how the federal gov­ ernment manipulated the monetary policy of the 1930s for its own benefit. The history of the regulation of the savings and loan industry is the subject of Chapter 6. James Barth and Martin Regalia examine the way in which regulation of the industry has evolved since the first savings and loan was established in the 1830s. They conclude that the stated purpose of regulation appears to have changed, even while the regulations themselves often have not. Barth and Regalia provide some important insights into the contribution of thrift regu­ lation to the current problems facing the indusb-y as well as some suggestions about the direction reform should-and should not­ take.
1 Introduction The Financial Services Revolution.- I The History Of Banks And Bank Regulation.- 2 The Truth about Bank Runs.- 3 The Big Bust: The 1930-33 Banking Collapse—Its Causes, Its Lessons.- 4 Was the Establishment of a Canadian Central Bank in 1935 Necessary?.- 5 A Public Choice Perspective of the 1933 Banking Act.- New Deal Monetary Legislation for the Welfare of the Government: Comment on Shughart.- 6 The Evolving Role of Regulation in the Savings and Loan Industry.- II A Regulatory System In Need Of Repair.- 7 Deposit Insurance in Theory and Practice.- Toward a Sound Financial System: Comment on O’Driscoll.- 8 Financial Stability and FDIC Insurance.- 9 The Role of the Federal Reserve in Reserve Requirement Regulation.- Federal Reserve Interest Rate Smoothing: Comment on Toma.- 10 The FSLIC Is “Broke” in More Ways than One.- 11 Nonbank Banks Are Not the Problem: Outmoded Regulations Are.- III The Future Of Financial Services.- 12 Reuniting Investment and Commercial Banking.- 13 Can Banking and Commerce Mix?.- Comment on “Can Banking and Commerce Mix?”.- 14 Agency Costs and Unregulated Banks: Could Depositors Protect Themselves?.- Evolution in Banking: Comment on England.