Publication Date

1-1-1995

Document Type

Article

Organizational Units

Sturm College of Law

Keywords

Securities, Glass-Steagall

Abstract

Glass-Steagall separated banking and securities activities from the Great Depression through much of the 1990s. By 1995, the Act was viewed as an anachronism, a dinosaur that in a deregulatory era ought to go.

In fact, Glass-Steagall had a significant impact on the vibrancy of the securities markets by preventing underwriting and other capital raising functions from becoming dominated by banks. Instead, the Act enabled the development of a strong securities industry that had as its primary purpose capital raising. This contributed to the strengths of the US capital markets. Evidence from Japan and Germany suggest that without some type of forced separation, securities markets tend to become bank dominated and the capital markets less vibrant. The same could happen to the United States with the repeal of Glass Steagall.

Publication Statement

Copyright held by the authors. User is responsible for all copyright compliance.

Originally published as Brown, The Great Fall: The Consequences of Repealing the Glass-Steagall Act, 2 Stanford J. of Law, Bus. & Finance 129 (Fall 1995).



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