The Glass–Steagall legislation describes four provisions of the United States Banking Act of 1933 separating commercial and investment banking. The article 1933 Banking Act describes the entire law, including the legislative history of the provisions covered herein.
As for the Glass–Steagall Act of 1932, the common name comes from the names of the Congressional sponsors, Senator Carter Glass and Representative Henry B. Steagall.
The separation of commercial and investment banking prevented securities firms and investment banks from taking deposits, and commercial Federal Reserve member banks from:
- dealing in non-governmental securities for customers,
- investing in non-investment grade securities for themselves,
- underwriting or distributing non-governmental securities,
- affiliating (or sharing employees) with companies involved in such activities.
By that time, many commentators argued Glass–Steagall was already "dead". Most notably, Citibank's 1998 affiliation with Salomon Smith Barney, one of the largest US securities firms, was permitted under the Federal Reserve Board's then existing interpretation of the Glass–Steagall Act. In November 1999, President Bill Clinton publicly declared "the Glass–Steagall law is no longer appropriate".
Some commentators have stated that the GLBA's repeal of the affiliation restrictions of the Glass–Steagall Act was an important cause of the financial crisis of 2007–2008. Nobel Prize in Economics laureate Joseph Stiglitz argued that the effect of the repeal was "indirect": "[w]hen repeal of Glass-Steagall brought investment and commercial banks together, the investment-bank culture came out on top". Economists at the Federal Reserve, such as Chairman Ben Bernanke, have argued that the activities linked to the financial crisis were not prohibited (or, in most cases, even regulated) by the Glass–Steagall Act.
Sponsors
The sponsors of both the Banking Act of 1933 and the Glass–Steagall Act of 1932 were southern Democrats: Senator Carter Glass
of Virginia (who in 1932 had been in the House, Secretary of the
Treasury, or in the Senate, for the preceding 30 years), and
Representative Henry B. Steagall of Alabama (who had been in the House for the preceding 17 years).
Legislative history
Between 1930 and 1932 Senator Carter Glass (D-VA) introduced several
versions of a bill (known in each version as the Glass bill) to regulate
or prohibit the combination of commercial and investment banking and to
establish other reforms (except deposit insurance) similar to the final
provisions of the 1933 Banking Act.
On June 16, 1933, President Roosevelt signed the bill into law. Glass
originally introduced his banking reform bill in January 1932. It
received extensive critiques and comments from bankers, economists, and
the Federal Reserve Board. It passed the Senate in February 1932, but
the House adjourned before coming to a decision. The Senate passed a
version of the Glass bill that would have required commercial banks to
eliminate their securities affiliates.
The final Glass–Steagall provisions contained in the 1933 Banking
Act reduced from five years to one year the period in which commercial
banks were required to eliminate such affiliations.
Although the deposit insurance provisions of the 1933 Banking Act were
very controversial, and drew veto threats from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
President Roosevelt supported the Glass–Steagall provisions separating
commercial and investment banking, and Representative Steagall included
those provisions in his House bill that differed from Senator Glass's
Senate bill primarily in its deposit insurance provisions. Steagall insisted on protecting small banks while Glass felt that small banks were the weakness to U.S. banking.
Many accounts of the Act identify the Pecora Investigation as important in leading to the Act, particularly its Glass–Steagall provisions, becoming law.
While supporters of the Glass–Steagall separation of commercial and
investment banking cite the Pecora Investigation as supporting that
separation,
Glass–Steagall critics have argued that the evidence from the Pecora
Investigation did not support the separation of commercial and
investment banking.
This source states that Senator Glass proposed many versions of
his bill to Congress known as the Glass Bills in the two years prior to
the Glass–Steagall Act being passed. It also includes how the deposit
insurance provisions of the bill were very controversial at the time,
which almost led to the rejection of the bill once again.
The previous Glass Bills before the final revision all had
similar goals and brought up the same objectives which were to separate
commercial from investment banking, bring more banking activities under
Federal Reserve supervision and to allow branch banking. In May 1933
Steagall's addition of allowing state chartered banks to receive federal
deposit insurance and shortening the time in which banks needed to
eliminate securities affiliates to one year was known as the driving
force of what helped the Glass–Steagall act to be signed into law.
Separating commercial and investment banking
The Glass–Steagall separation of commercial and investment banking
was in four sections of the 1933 Banking Act (sections 16, 20, 21, and
32). The Banking Act of 1935
clarified the 1933 legislation and resolved inconsistencies in it.
Together, they prevented commercial Federal Reserve member banks from:
- dealing in non-governmental securities for customers
- investing in non-investment grade securities for themselves
- underwriting or distributing non-governmental securities
- affiliating (or sharing employees) with companies involved in such activities
Conversely, Glass–Steagall prevented securities firms and investment banks from taking deposits.
The law gave banks one year after the law was passed on June 16,
1933 to decide whether they would be a commercial bank or an investment
bank. Only 10 percent of a commercial bank's income could stem from
securities. One exception to this rule was that commercial banks could
underwrite government-issued bonds.
There were several "loopholes" that regulators and financial
firms were able to exploit during the lifetime of Glass–Steagall
restrictions. Aside from the Section 21 prohibition on securities firms
taking deposits, neither savings and loans nor state-chartered banks
that did not belong to the Federal Reserve System were restricted by
Glass–Steagall. Glass–Steagall also did not prevent securities firms
from owning such institutions. S&Ls
and securities firms took advantage of these loopholes starting in the
1960s to create products and affiliated companies that chipped away at
commercial banks' deposit and lending businesses.
While permitting affiliations between securities firms and
companies other than Federal Reserve member banks, Glass–Steagall
distinguished between what a Federal Reserve member bank could do
directly and what an affiliate could do. Whereas a Federal Reserve
member bank could not buy, sell, underwrite, or deal in any security
except as specifically permitted by Section 16, such a bank could
affiliate with a company so long as that company was not "engaged
principally" in such activities. Starting in 1987, the Federal Reserve
Board interpreted this to mean a member bank could affiliate with a
securities firm so long as that firm was not "engaged principally" in
securities activities prohibited for a bank by Section 16. By the time
the GLBA repealed the Glass–Steagall affiliation restrictions, the
Federal Reserve Board had interpreted this "loophole" in those
restrictions to mean a banking company (Citigroup, as owner of Citibank) could acquire one of the world's largest securities firms (Salomon Smith Barney).
By defining commercial banks as banks that take in deposits and
make loans and investment banks as banks that underwrite and deal with
securities the Glass–Steagall act explained the separation of banks by
stating that commercial banks could not deal with securities and
investment banks could not own commercial banks or have close
connections with them. With the exception of commercial banks being
allowed to underwrite government-issued bonds, commercial banks could
only have 10 percent of their income come from securities.
Decline and repeal
It was not until 1933 that the separation of commercial banking and
investment banking was considered controversial. There was a belief that
the separation would lead to a healthier financial system.
As time passed, however, the separation became so controversial that in
1935, Senator Glass himself attempted to "repeal" the prohibition on
direct bank underwriting by permitting a limited amount of bank
underwriting of corporate debt.
In the 1960s the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
issued aggressive interpretations of Glass–Steagall to permit national
banks to engage in certain securities activities. Although most of these
interpretations were overturned by court decisions, by the late 1970s
bank regulators began issuing Glass–Steagall interpretations that were
upheld by courts and that permitted banks and their affiliates to engage
in an increasing variety of securities activities. Starting in the
1960s banks and non-banks developed financial products that blurred the
distinction between banking and securities products, as they
increasingly competed with each other.
Separately, starting in the 1980s, Congress debated bills to
repeal Glass–Steagall's affiliation provisions (Sections 20 and 32).
Some believe that major U.S. financial sector firms established a
favorable view of deregulation in American political circles, and in
using its political influence in Congress to overturn key provisions of
Glass-Steagall and to dismantle other major provisions of statutes and
regulations that govern financial firms and the risks they may take.
In 1999 Congress passed the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act, also known as the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, to repeal them. Eight days later, President Bill Clinton signed it into law.
Aftermath of repeal
After the financial crisis of 2007–2008,
some commentators argued that the repeal of Sections 20 and 32 had
played an important role in leading to the housing bubble and financial
crisis. Economics Nobel prize laureate Joseph Stiglitz,
for instance, argued that "[w]hen repeal of Glass-Steagall brought
investment and commercial banks together, the investment-bank culture
came out on top", and banks which had previously been managed
conservatively turned to riskier investments to increase their returns. Another laureate, Paul Krugman, contended that the repealing of the act "was indeed a mistake"; however, it was not the cause of the financial crisis.
Other commentators believed that these banking changes had no
effect, and the financial crisis would have happened the same way if the
regulations had still been in force. Lawrence J. White,
for instance, noted that "it was not [commercial banks'] investment
banking activities, such as underwriting and dealing in securities, that
did them in".
At the time of the repeal, most commentators believed it would be
harmless. Because the Federal Reserve's interpretations of the act had
already weakened restrictions previously in place, commentators did not
find much significance in the repeal, especially of sections 20 and 32.
Instead, the five year anniversary of its repeal was marked by numerous
sources explaining that the GLBA had not significantly changed the
market structure of the banking and securities industries. More
significant changes had occurred during the 1990s when commercial
banking firms had gained a significant role in securities markets
through "Section 20 affiliates".
Post-financial crisis reform debate
Following the financial crisis of 2007–2008, legislators
unsuccessfully tried to reinstate Glass–Steagall Sections 20 and 32 as
part of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
Both in the United States and elsewhere around the world, banking
reforms have been proposed that refer to Glass–Steagall principles.
These proposals include issues of “ringfencing” commercial banking operations and narrow banking proposals that would sharply reduce the permitted activities of commercial banks.