| Working
Paper 95-5
by Joe Peek and Eric
S. Rosengren
Revised paper was published in Universal Banking
Financial System Design Reconsidered in A. Saunders
and I. Walter, eds., 628-55 (1996).
The recent relaxation of restrictions on interstate
banking and branching, as well as the likely relaxation
of Glass-Steagall restrictions, should encourage significant
consolidation in the banking industry. Larger lenders,
diversified across regions and products, will undoubtedly
be less susceptible to adverse economic shocks that
have buffeted the banking industry over the past decade.
However, as small banks with a small business loan emphasis
are absorbed into larger, more diversified lenders,
which tend to focus much less on small business lending,
credit availability to bank-dependent small business
borrowers should be a major public policy concern. In
New England, the evidence indicates that many large
acquirers have chosen not to maintain the small business
loan portfolios of their smaller target banks. This
reduction in small business lending as a result of acquisitions
indicates that many banks have little interest in maintaining
the historical lending relationships fostered by the
small target banks. As consolidation reduces the number
of small banks that focus on small business loans, some
niches will be created that can be served by de novo
entry, although the evidence suggests that de novo entry
is unlikely to quickly fill any major voids in small
business lending.
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