This paper analyzes the potential effects of commercial banks’ expansion into the securities business, taking into account the underlying conditions assumed by the modern literature to explain the existence of financial intermediaries.
This paper uses an intermediation model to study the efficiency and welfare implications of both banks’ required capital-asset ratio and the regulation that limits.
Lord Byron once wrote that “ready money is Aladdin’s lamp.” And who can deny that liquidity—having enough ready cash to pay your debts when they come due—is a good thing?
Congress, the Administration, and the bank regulatory agencies are considering various proposals to usher the U.S. banking system into the twenty-first century.