Big Bad Banks? The Winners and Losers from Bank Deregulation in the United States
Goethe University Frankfurt · Center for Economic and Policy Research · +4 more institutions
Abstract
ABSTRACT We assess the impact of bank deregulation on the distribution of income in the United States. From the 1970s through the 1990s, most states removed restrictions on intrastate branching, which intensified bank competition and improved bank performance. Exploiting the cross‐state, cross‐time variation in the timing of branch deregulation, we find that deregulation materially tightened the distribution of income by boosting incomes in the lower part of the income distribution while having little impact on incomes above the median. Bank deregulation tightened the distribution of income by increasing the relative wage rates and working hours of unskilled workers.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.05
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
3- TBThorsten BeckCorresponding
Goethe University Frankfurt, Center for Economic and Policy Research, International Monetary Fund, Federal Reserve, Tilburg University, University of Virginia
- RLRoss Levine
Goethe University Frankfurt, Center for Economic and Policy Research, International Monetary Fund, Federal Reserve, Tilburg University, University of Virginia
- ALAlexey Levkov
Goethe University Frankfurt, Center for Economic and Policy Research, International Monetary Fund, Federal Reserve, Tilburg University, University of Virginia
Topics & keywords
- Deregulation
- Economics
- Distribution (mathematics)
- Income distribution
- Wage
- Competition (biology)
- Labour economics
- Monetary economics
- Decent work and economic growth