Safety, soundness, and the evolution of the U.S. banking industry
Robert DeYoung
Economic Review, 2007, issue Q1-2, No v. 92, nos. 1-2, 41 - 66
Abstract:
Although the banking system appears to be safer and sounder today than it was two decades ago, new risk challenges have arisen that could not have been anticipated in the 1980s. This article outlines the fundamental structural changes in the U.S. commercial banking industry since then. ; The author's strategic analysis of the current state of the industry compares the \"transactions banking\" business model practiced by large financial companies to the more traditional relationship-based banking business model. In particular, the author focuses on the different production technologies, product mixes, strategic behaviors, and risk-return trade-offs that characterize these two opposite approaches. In closing, the article discusses what these new developments may mean for the industry's ongoing safety and soundness.
Keywords: Banks and banking; Bank supervision (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2007
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:fip:fedaer:y:2007:i:q1-2:p:41-66:n:v.92nos.1-2
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