XF-GHFE5AE-T
Research / Academic Paper ACTIVE

Big bad banks? The winners and losers from bank deregulation in the United States

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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.

Source: resolved

Document Metadata

Issuer
Wiley
Document Type
Research / Academic Paper
Publication Year
2010
Retrieved
5 May 2026
Source
Contact XFID for Access
Record ID
XFGHFE5AET
Validation
Inferred by XFID

Topics

Bank LendingCorporate Finance

How to Cite This Record

Use the XFID in citations to create a stable, permanent reference that resolves to this registry entry regardless of the source URL.

Academic / report citation
Wiley (2010). Big bad banks? The winners and losers from bank deregulation in the United States. XFID: XF-GHFE5AE-T. Retrieved from https://xframework.id/XFGHFE5AET
Identifier only
XF-GHFE5AE-T