49 research outputs found
Regulatory Rollback and White-Collar Crime in the Era of Trump: The Challenges of Perspective
Linking Pornography Consumption to Support for Adolescents' Access to Birth Control: Cumulative Results from Multiple Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal National Surveys
#MeToo is different for college students: Media framing of campus sexual assault, its causes, and proposed solutions
Lobbying on Regulatory Enforcement Actions: Evidence from U.S. Commercial and Savings Banks
This paper analyzes the relationship between bank lobbying and supervisory decisions of regulators and documents its moral hazard implications. Exploiting bank-level information on the universe of commercial and savings banks in the United States, I find that regulators are 44.7% less likely to initiate enforcement actions against lobbying banks. This result is robust across measures of lobbying and accounts for endogeneity concerns by employing instrumental variables strategies. In addition, I show that lobbying banks are riskier and reliably underperform their nonlobbying peers. Overall, these results appear rather inconsistent with an information-based explanation of bank lobbying, but consistent with the theory of regulatory capture
