It has been estimated that deregulation of US S&Ls will cost the US
taxpayer L500bn in terms of the compensation paid out for the resulting
scandals and failures. In contrast, the deregulation of UK
building societies, although initially followed by a series of scandals
and losses of L1bn., eventually resulted in substantially increased
profitability. The social effects in the UK
have been quite different to those in the US. As a result of the
increased importance placed on profitability as opposed to mutuality,
many homeowners have had their properties repossessed, and investors
been mis-sold unsuitable investments. However, UK
building sociieties, by a mixture of good luck and judgement, have
avoided the principal regulatory pitfalls, which beset the S&Ls in
terms of bankruptcies and fraud. This paper seeks to explain these
different post-deregulation experiences. It extends to the UK
the looting model of Akerlof and Romer (1993) and the managerial
diversion model of Nichols (1972) which went so far to explain and
anticipate, respectively, the US experience.
Keyword Search:
Savings & loan association failures;
Deregulation;
Costs;
Effects;
Building societies;
Comparative studies;
Statistical analysis
Deregulation;
Costs;
Effects;
Building societies;
Comparative studies;
Statistical analysis
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