|
JULIE LAUMANN
New York University
PAUL TESKE
Stony Brook University
Principals,
Agents, and the Impact of Regulatory Federalism on the Savings-and-Loans
Crisis of
the 1980s
Was state financial
regulation a major cause of the massive savings and loan (S&L) failures
in the late 1980s? This question is critical at a time of continuing devolution
of regulatory authority to the states. We employ a database of information
on nearly 4,000 S&Ls in this period to understand the factors that
led some of them to fail. We find that state-chartered S&Ls failed
at higher rates than federally chartered firms, but that the extremely
high failure rate of Texas-chartered S&Ls explains all of this difference.
The actions of a single, large state can make an enormous difference in
the American federal system of regulation. We also find that stock-owned
S&Ls failed at a higher rate than mutually owned S&Ls, and that
S&Ls chartered in jurisdictions with more autonomous regulatory structures
failed at a higher rate. Thus, when the principal-agent relationship in
S&L regulation was weakest, S&L failures were most prevalent.
|
|