A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'

This paper examines premises and data underlying the assertion that some financial institutions in the U.S. economy were "too big to fail" and hence warranted government bailout. It traces the merger histories enhancing the dominance of six leading firms in the U. S. banking industry and h...

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Main Author: Scherer, F. M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università Carlo Cattaneo LIUC 2010-12-01
Series:The European Journal of Comparative Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979201002/182429792010070202.pdf
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spelling doaj-3aed770cb7724d3c89ba771f7d802d062020-11-25T01:49:37ZengUniversità Carlo Cattaneo LIUCThe European Journal of Comparative Economics1824-29792010-12-0172267284A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'Scherer, F. M.This paper examines premises and data underlying the assertion that some financial institutions in the U.S. economy were "too big to fail" and hence warranted government bailout. It traces the merger histories enhancing the dominance of six leading firms in the U. S. banking industry and he sharp increases in the concentration of financial institution assets accompanying that merger wave. Financial institution profits are found to have soared in tandem with rising concentration. The paper advances hypotheses why these phenomena might be related and surveys relevant empirical literature on the relationships between market concentration, interest rates received and charged by banks, and economies of scale in banking.http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979201002/182429792010070202.pdfsystemic riskmarket concentrationmergersscale economies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Scherer, F. M.
spellingShingle Scherer, F. M.
A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'
The European Journal of Comparative Economics
systemic risk
market concentration
mergers
scale economies
author_facet Scherer, F. M.
author_sort Scherer, F. M.
title A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'
title_short A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'
title_full A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'
title_fullStr A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'
title_full_unstemmed A Perplexed Economist Confronts 'too Big to Fail'
title_sort perplexed economist confronts 'too big to fail'
publisher Università Carlo Cattaneo LIUC
series The European Journal of Comparative Economics
issn 1824-2979
publishDate 2010-12-01
description This paper examines premises and data underlying the assertion that some financial institutions in the U.S. economy were "too big to fail" and hence warranted government bailout. It traces the merger histories enhancing the dominance of six leading firms in the U. S. banking industry and he sharp increases in the concentration of financial institution assets accompanying that merger wave. Financial institution profits are found to have soared in tandem with rising concentration. The paper advances hypotheses why these phenomena might be related and surveys relevant empirical literature on the relationships between market concentration, interest rates received and charged by banks, and economies of scale in banking.
topic systemic risk
market concentration
mergers
scale economies
url http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979201002/182429792010070202.pdf
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