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Accelerating Inflation, Technological Innovation, and the Decreasing Effectiveness of Banking Regulation

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TLDR
In this article, the authors use the regulatory dialectic assumptions about the objectives of federal banking regulation and about outside forces that disturb the adjustment process to explain the evolution of U.S. deposit institutions and markets.
Abstract
To explain the evolution of U.S. deposit institutions and markets in the 1960sand 1970s, we feed into the regulatory dialectic assumptions about the objectives of federal banking regulation and about outside forces that disturb the adjustment process. The disturbing exogenous forces are accelerating change in the technological and market environment of commercial banking and increasing uncertainty concerning the future speed of enviromental change. We hypothesize that, in the face of these environmental changes, the adaptive efficiency shown on average by deposit-institution managers is greater than that shown by managers of the several competing banking agencies. Incorporating this differential adaptive capacity into the regulatory dialectic helps us to understand how increases in the pace of environmental change and in the degree of environmental uncertainty led regulatee responses to come more quickly and regulatory responses to come more slowly. The bottom line is that, when the environment changes rapidly and becomes more uncertain, traditional forms of U.S. banking regulation can be overwhelmed by technological and regulation-induced innovation.

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References
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Book

The Theory of Economic Regulation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that regulation is acquired by the industry and is designed and operated primarily for its benefit, and that the state has one basic resource which in pure principle is not shared with even the mightiest of its citizens.
Book

Bureaucracy and representative government

TL;DR: Niskanen as mentioned in this paper developed a formal theory of supply by bureaus and developed a simple theory of the market for public services financed through a representative government; the final section suggests a set of changes to improve the performance of our bureaucratic and political institutions, based both on theory and professional experience.
Book ChapterDOI

Industrial Organization, Corporate Strategy and Structure

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors surveyed the relationships between market structure and corporate strategy and found that market structure influences the economic performance of a large firm and the market in which it sells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taxation by Regulation

TL;DR: Taxation by regulation as discussed by the authors is a taxation-by-regulation approach to taxation in the regulatory process, and it can explain some otherwise perplexing features of the process and the industries subject to it, and compare it with other methods of public finance.
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Good Intentions and Unintended Evil: The Case Against Selective Credit Allocation

TL;DR: Good Intentions and Unintended Evil: The Case Against Selective Credit Allocation as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the area of credit allocation, focusing on the case against selective credit allocation.
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