What Makes Banks Special? A Study of Banking, Finance, and Economic Development

Over the past decades, finance theory has contributed significantly to understanding banks and identifying what qualifies them to be special financial intermediaries. Historically, banks have had a comparative advantage in certain functions - such as providing liquidity and payment services and supplying credit and information - which competition, technological change, and institutional development have increasingly eroded. And the spread of e-money could deal a blow to conventional banking, generating entirely new ways of doing finance. After integrating his examination of money, production, and investment, the author argues that banks remain special in that they lend claims on their own debt and the public accepts the debt claims as money. His study shows the banks and nonbank financial intermediaries perform complementary functions essential to the economy. Risk reduction policies in payment systems, banking asset allocation, and the deposit market affect the economy's tradeoff between risk and efficiency and the cost of generating resources to finance production. As possibilities for global communications expand, trust will matter more than ever, and banks and other financial intermediaries will be in a good position to bridge gaps in trust when it comes to creating money and intermediating funds.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bossone, Biagio
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2000-08
Subjects:ADVERSE SELECTION, ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES, ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION, AUDITING, BANK ACCOUNTS, BANK ASSETS, BANK DEPOSITS, BANK FAILURES, BANK LENDING, BANK LIABILITIES, BANK LOANS, BANK RUNS, BANK SIZE, BANKING SECTOR, BANKING THEORY, BANKRUPTCY, BANKS, BORROWING, BROKERS, CAPITAL GOODS, CAPITAL MARKETS, CENTRAL BANK, CENTRAL BANKS, CIRCUIT MODEL, CIRCULAR FLOW, COMMERCIAL BANKS, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, CONSUMERS, CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT, CREDIT MARKETS, DEBT, DEFAULT RISK, DEMAND DEPOSITS, DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS, DEPOSIT TRANSFERS, DEPOSITORS, DEPOSITS, DIRECT FINANCING, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC THEORY, ECONOMICS, ECONOMICS OF INFORMATION, EQUILIBRIUM, EXPECTED RETURNS, FACTORING, FINANCIAL ASSETS, FINANCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE, FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES, FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION, FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FINANCIAL SYSTEMS, GAME THEORY, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, HUMAN CAPITAL, ILLIQUIDITY, INCOME, INFORMATION ASYMMETRIES, INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT, INSURANCE, INTERBANK PAYMENTS, INTEREST RATE, LIQUIDATION, LIQUIDITY, MICROECONOMICS, MONETARY POLICY, MONEY MULTIPLIER, MORAL HAZARD, MUTUAL FUND, NARROW BANKING, NOMINAL CAPITAL, NONBANKS, PAYMENT SYSTEMS, PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFICATION, PORTFOLIOS, PRIVATE INFORMATION, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGY, PRODUCTIVE ASSETS, PROFITABILITY, PURCHASING POWER, REAL SECTOR, RESERVE REQUIREMENTS, RISK SHARING, SAFETY NETS, SAVINGS, SECURITIES, SETTLEMENT SYSTEMS, SUBSIDIARIES, TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE, TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS, TRANSACTION COSTS, WAGES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/08/443623/makes-banks-special-study-banking-finance-economic-development
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19815
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