Author(s): Mettenheim, Kurt von ; Butzbach, Olivier
Date: 2016
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10438/17567
Origin: Oasisbr
Subject(s): Banks; Administração de empresas; Cooperativas de crédito; Bancos de desenvolvimento; Bancos - História
Author(s): Mettenheim, Kurt von ; Butzbach, Olivier
Date: 2016
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10438/17567
Origin: Oasisbr
Subject(s): Banks; Administração de empresas; Cooperativas de crédito; Bancos de desenvolvimento; Bancos - História
Paper apresentado ao Accounting, Economics and Law Group, Meeting of the Society for the Advancement of Social Economics San Francisco, 24-6 July 2016
This paper explores how savings banks, cooperative banks, and development banks were founded as social reactions of self-defense in the 19th century, accumulated patient capital but suffered political capture in the early 20th century, and have unexpectedly realized competitive advantages as liberalization and new technologies changed their industries in the late 20th and early 21st century. Theories of banking and institutional foundations of competitive advantage help explain this anomaly for contemporary approaches that define banks as profit-maximizing financial firms. Evidence from history, balance sheets, and 36 difference of means tests of 7,581 commercial banks 1,693 cooperative banks and 70 government banks from 2006-12 confirm recent evidence that alternative banks make better banks. Although reforms have marginalized alternative banks in liberal market economies, liberalization produced back to the future modernization of patient capital practices at alternative banks in coordinated market economies.