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The revolving door and worker flows in banking regulation
Institution:1. Federal Reserve Bank of New York, United States;2. University of Chicago and NBER, United States;3. University of British Columbia, NBER, and CIFAR, Canada;1. London Business School, Regent׳s Park, London NW1 4SA, United Kingdom;2. Department of Economics, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom;1. Columbia University, Department of Economics, International Affairs Building, 420 West 118th St., New York, NY 10027, United States;2. NBER, United States;1. Paris School of Economics, France;2. École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, France;3. European Business School, France;4. Rutgers University, United States;5. NBER, United States
Abstract:This paper traces career transitions of federal and state U.S. banking regulators from a large sample of publicly available curricula vitae, and provides basic facts on worker flows between the regulatory and private sector resulting from the revolving door. We find strong countercyclical net worker flows into regulatory jobs, driven largely by higher gross outflows into the private sector during booms. These worker flows are also driven by state-specific banking conditions as measured by local banks’ profitability, asset quality and failure rates. The regulatory sector seems to experience a retention challenge over time, with shorter regulatory spells for workers, and especially those with higher education. Evidence from cross-state enforcement actions of regulators shows gross inflows into regulation and gross outflows from regulation are both higher during periods of intense enforcement, though gross outflows are significantly smaller in magnitude. These results appear inconsistent with a “quid-pro-quo” explanation of the revolving door, but consistent with a “regulatory schooling” hypothesis.
Keywords:Banking regulation  Revolving door  Inter-industry worker flows
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