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This paper investigates how organizational structure can affect a firm's ability to compete. In particular, we examine the two ways in which U.S. commercial banks organized their investment banking operations before the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act forced the banks to leave the securities business:...
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We examine the two ways in which U.S. commercial banks organized their investment banking operations before the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act forced the banks to leave the securitiesbusiness: as an internal securities department within the bank and as a separately incorporated affiliate with its own...
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The following is a description of the paper, and not the actual abstract: This paper investigates empirically whether the internal organization of the firm can play an important role in affecting a firm's ability to commit to a particular quality of business practices and, if so, whether...
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This paper uses evidence from the capital markets to examine changes in the legal rules governing a form of non price vertical restraint, namely, exclusive territories (ET). During the past three decades the U.S. Supreme Court has reinterpreted section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust act concerning...
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