What can price theory say about the Community Reinvestment Act?
Lacy, Robert L. ; Walter, John R.
The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA or Act) is credited with
funneling billions of dollars in loans and investments to distressed
U.S. communities over the last two decades. Passed in 1977 in response
to concerns that banks were failing to make loans in declining
communities, the Act in essence requires federal bank regulators to
assess banks' lending and investment activities and encourage
expanded lending and investment in lower-income communities. (1) Its
passage was viewed as an important step in curbing lending practices
that might discriminate against borrowers in low-income communities and
assuring that banks would provide much-needed funding for urban and
rural development. And CRA has indeed changed the way bankers think
about lending in low-income communities in the United States. With
federal regulators looking over their shoulders, bankers today are more
careful about their lending and investment practices, particularly to
the extent that such practices differ across the often-diverse
communities they serve. While it is difficult to quantify the
contribution of CRA to community development, some lower-income
neighborhoods undoubtedly have benefited from the Act. The percentage of
low-income loans in the typical bank's loan portfolio has grown,
albeit modestly, in recent years, and many cities have received sizeable
grants from banks in support of their community development efforts.
Yet, 25 years after its passage, CRA continues to draw criticism
and generate controversy. The controversy stems in part from differences
of opinion regarding the need for CRA as a tool to counter
discriminatory lending practices given that comprehensive fair-lending
laws are also in place. Critics of the Act maintain that there is little
evidence that banks discriminate by neighborhood or community when
lending and that therefore there is little need for legislation that
goes beyond the protection offered by laws preventing discrimination
based on minority status. Proponents of CRA, however, argue that the Act
is needed because in its absence some banks would indeed discriminate
based on a borrower's location, and perhaps even completely refuse
to serve some neighborhoods, essentially redlining those communities.
Many proponents believe that CRA offers minorities additional protection
against discrimination even if banks don't redline.
Some proponents of CRA also argue that the Act improves
lending-market performance by increasing the information available about
lending in low-income areas. If so, then CRA can be beneficial for both
borrowers and lenders. Canner and Passmore (1995, 77-79) discuss this
view of CRA as a mechanism for correcting for market failure due to
externalities and compare this perspective to other views of how CRA
affects bank lending. If CRA partially corrects for market failure, then
lending markets can become more efficient.
But critics of CRA have suggested that such government intervention
in the banking industry reduces the efficiency of credit markets. They
argue that this intervention, which in the case of lending allows some
low-income borrowers to secure loans at below-market interest rates or
on better-than-market terms, can distort credit markets and cause
resources to be wasted. There are those who maintain that CRA lending
represents a substantial subsidy to low-income borrowers and suggest
that direct government aid or government loan programs provide a more
efficient means of assisting low-income communities. Lacker (1995,
15-18), for example, is skeptical of the externalities argument,
wondering why lending in low-income neighborhoods should be any more
susceptible to market failure than lending in more affluent
neighborhoods. He argues that funding community development directly out
of general tax revenues seems more promising than employing CRA to
redistribute income to alleviate the problems of the nation's low-i
ncome neighborhoods.
Without denying the benefits of CRA, we identify unique lending
costs the Act imposes and analyze how these costs affect credit markets.
We argue that CRA enforcement requires some banks to expand their
low-income lending to such an extent that unprofitable loans are likely
to be made, creating inefficiencies in credit markets. These
inefficiencies are created as banks modify lending in response to CRA
regulations and examinations. We also explore why CRA continues to
survive in today's banking environment, despite the above costs
that it imposes on banks but not on banks' competitors.
Requirements that impose higher costs on only one segment of an industry
are notoriously difficult to maintain in a competitive environment, and
since the passage of CRA in 1977, the financial services industry has
clearly become more competitive. Banks must charge customers in some
markets higher prices in order to sustain lower, unprofitable prices in
other markets. As competitors successfully target these higher-priced
marke ts, however, one would expect the source of funding to eventually
dry up. A number of industries--telecommunications, electric utilities,
and airlines--that have also been subject to deregulation and increased
competition over the last 20 years have seen similar requirements erode as markets became more competitive.
We believe that CRA has survived for 25 years for two reasons: (1)
a portion of CRA's costs can be shifted to banking products for
which there are fewer alternatives offered by banks' competitors,
and (2) CRA's costs are relatively small. Looking ahead, while many
community activists support CRA and would like to see it play an even
larger role in funding community development, we consider it unlikely
that CRA will take on an expanded role because competition imposes very
real limits on banks' ability to draw funds from customers to
support CRA lending.
1. CRA AND COST SHIFTS
In evaluating the effects of CRA on bank lending, we model CRA as a
requirement to expand output of one product of a multiproduct firm. More
specifically, this requirement is that a bank's low-income lending
equal a fixed proportion of total lending. (2) We also assume that CRA
requires banks to expand low-income lending beyond the level that would
prevail in the absence of the Act. We begin by discussing a
proportion-based requirement in general terms, and then illustrate some
of the consequences for costs and output using a hypothetical example of
a lawn mower manufacturer. A detailed presentation of the consequences
of a proportional CRA lending requirement concludes the section.
A Requirement to Expand Output
Requirements meant to encourage expanded output of one product sold
by a multiproduct firm are not unique to banking. For example,
regulations adopted in California in 1990 encourage expanded production
of environmentally benign motor vehicles. These regulations require that
specific percentages of passenger cars and certain light-duty trucks
produced for sale in the state by each of the seven largest auto
manufacturers be zero-emission vehicles (ZEV). The objective was that
ZEVs compose 2 percent of production by model year 1998 and 10 percent
by 2003. (3)
In a competitive industry, a requirement to expand output beyond
the level chosen by a firm will generally mean that the additional
output is produced at a loss. A producer in such an industry normally
chooses to produce the quantity at which its marginal costs just equal
the price buyers are willing to pay. Since marginal costs of production
generally rise with increasing output, and because in a perfectly
competitive market a single price exists for the firm's entire
output, profits are greatest at a level of output where marginal costs
equal the market price. If production is below this level, the cost of
producing an additional unit is below the price buyers are willing to
pay, so the firm will continue to expand output in order to increase
profits. The producer will not choose to expand output beyond the point
at which marginal costs equal price because it would suffer losses on
this additional output.
If the firm produces two goods and a regulation requires that the
production of one good be expanded to be at least a certain percentage
of total production of both goods, then a penalty cost is incurred for
the production of the second good. The penalty cost consists of the
losses from additional sales of the first good, for these losses must be
incurred when additional quantities of the second good are sold. The
imposition of a penalty cost matters little if all firms are subject to
the same regulation. But if some firms are free of regulation, such
firms will gain market share in the second good. Unregulated firms do
not sustain a penalty cost, so they can charge a lower price and acquire
some of the regulated firms' customers.
An Example
To illustrate how a market might respond to a regulation requiring
expansion of output, consider a simple hypothetical example of a lawn
mower manufacturer that sells both electric- and gasoline-powered lawn
mowers in a competitive market. Legislators in this example impose a
requirement that all manufacturers of lawn mowers produce relatively
more electric-powered models in order to protect the environment.
The supply curve for electric lawn mowers identifies the quantity
of such mowers the firm will produce at various prices. As the market
price increases, the manufacturer is able to recover higher
manufacturing costs, and the number of electric-powered mowers it is
willing to produce increases. The number of electric mowers produced at
a given price depends on the firm's marginal cost of production.
This cost rises as the firm produces more. The demand curve is
horizontal because the firm in our example operates in a perfectly
competitive market--it is only a small manufacturer in a large market
for electric mowers. It cannot affect the market price for electric
mowers because its portion of the market is almost insignificant. Given
its demand and supply curves, the firm will produce a quantity of mowers
identified by the intersection of supply and demand curves, or for our
example, 100 electric mowers. The firm earns its highest profit by
manufacturing 100 electric lawn mowers.
The manufacturer also chooses to produce the quantity of gas mowers
determined by the intersection of supply and demand curves for this
product. The equilibrium price and output quantities differ, however, in
the gas and electric mower markets. In equilibrium, we will assume the
manufacturer produces 100 electric mowers and 900 gas mowers, for a
total output of 1,000 lawn mowers.
Suppose legislators decide that electric lawn mowers are more
environmentally friendly and that their use should be encouraged.
Legislation is therefore passed requiring that electric mowers account
for 15 percent of total mower production rather than the current 10
percent. The legislative requirement leads the manufacturer to increase
its output of electric mowers beyond 100. The manufacturer's
marginal cost exceeds marginal revenue when it produces more than 100
mowers. With a regulation requiring the manufacturer to expand
production of electric mowers to 150, the manufacturer suffers losses on
each of the last 50 electric mowers produced.
Because of this requirement, the firm's supply curve for gas
mowers will shift leftward to a position above what it would be without
the requirement. Why does the requirement raise the manufacturer's
cost of producing gas mowers? Because the number of electric mowers
produced is determined by the manufacturer's production of all lawn
mowers, both electric and gas. As a result, when the manufacturer wishes
to expand its production of gas mowers, it must also expand its
production of electric mowers in order to comply with the electric mower
output requirement. So when a firm increases gas mower production, it is
required to produce electric mowers at a loss.
The output requirement will affect manufacturers to different
degrees because their cost curves vary. Some firms are especially
skillful or well equipped for producing electric mowers; others are more
skillful at gas mower production. For example, a manufacturer located in
a city with battery and electric-motor suppliers can be expected to have
relatively low costs for electric mower manufacture because shipping
costs for these mower components will be low. For manufacturers
especially equipped to make electric mowers, one would expect that
production of electric mowers as a percentage of all mowers would be
well above average in the absence of an output requirement, or above 10
percent in our example. For such manufacturers, electric mowers might
represent 25 percent of their total mower output. The legislative
requirement that electric mowers compose 15 percent of all mowers would
not result in a cost increase for these manufacturers--the requirement
is nonbinding for them.
CRA in a Competitive Banking Environment
CRA requirements impose a mandate to expand lower-income community
lending analogous to an automobile industry requirement promoting
electric vehicles and our hypothetical example of a requirement to
expand electric mower production. While CRA also promotes community
development investments and service, banks focus their CRA compliance
efforts on lending; therefore, our analysis of CRA does so as well. We
begin with a look at the effect of CRA on an individual bank assumed to
be operating in a competitive banking environment. A requirement to
expand lower-income lending will produce an increase in the effective
cost of other types of lending. This increase in banks' effective
lending costs means that nonbank lenders gain a competitive advantage.
We then broaden our analysis to cover the financial services industry as
a whole, including nonbank competitors. As will be shown, federal bank
regulators lose much of their ability to influence the number of loans
made to low-income communities when financial institu tions not subject
to CRA lending requirements emerge.
CRA and One Bank
When a bank operates in a perfectly competitive market, its supply
and demand curves for loans made in low-income communities appear as
shown in Figure 1a. The bank's supply curve identifies the number
of loans it is willing to make at various interest rates. As the market
rate of interest increases, the bank is able to recover higher costs of
lending, and the number of loans the bank is willing to make increases.
The number of loans it will make at a given interest rate, say
[R.sub.L], depends on the bank's marginal cost of lending. (4) The
bank's marginal cost of lending rises because to increase its
lending it must, for example, spend more to attract qualified loan
officers from other fields or make increasingly higher outlays for
marketing to attract additional borrowers. The demand curve D in Figure
1a is horizontal since the bank is only a small part of a huge lending
market. Given demand curve D and supply curve S, the bank will make 100
low-income loans--where the supply and demand curves intersect at point
E in Figure 1a.
Supply and demand curves for lending in other markets will be
similar and are represented in Figure 1b. We define other lending as
loans to all borrowers except those in low-income communities. We will
call them middle- to high-income (MHI) borrowers. (5) Note that in this
market too the bank chooses to make the number of loans determined by
the intersection of supply and demand curves. The equilibrium interest
rates and loan quantities differ, however, in the two markets. In our
example, in equilibrium the bank makes 100 low-income loans and 900
other loans for a total of 1,000 loans.
What effect do CRA requirements to expand lending have on the bank
in our model? If binding, CRA requirements oblige the bank to make more
low-income loans than it would if there were no requirements. Without
CRA requirements, the bank chooses to make 100 low-income loans
representing 10 percent of its total loans. Binding regulations,
however, require the bank to extend more low-income loans in order to
merit a satisfactory CRA rating. While its profit-maximizing output is
100 low-income and 900 other loans, binding CRA regulations require the
bank to make low-income loans equal to, say, 15 percent of all loans.
Although CRA examiners do not have explicit minimum percentage
guidelines that banks must meet, they do expect bank lending to
low-income individuals, in the absence of extenuating circumstances, to
be roughly proportional to the low-income population. More will be said
about examiner expectations later in Section 2.
Figures 2a and 2b illustrate the case in which CRA requirements are
binding; in our example, the bank in Figure 1a must make more than 100
low-income loans. In Figure 2a the bank's marginal cost exceeds
marginal interest earnings when it extends more than 100 low-income
loans. With a regulation requiring low-income loans equal to 15 percent
of total loans, the bank makes 150 loans, but it suffers losses
equivalent to area BCE on low-income loans between 100 and 150. The bank
would like to charge borrowers an interest rate sufficient to cover its
higher costs of making each additional loan. The bank's low-income
customers, however, are only willing to borrow at the interest rate of
[R.sub.L].
Supply and demand curves for the bank's other lending market
are shown in Figure 2b. The S curve in Figure 2b is the bank's cost
of making MHI loans, without CRA requirements. The S' curve is the
bank's cost of making MHI loans with a binding CRA requirement. The
S' curve lies above the S curve for most of its range, reflecting
the additional cost of a requirement to make at least some unprofitable
low-income loans. We define unprofitable loans as those for which
marginal cost exceeds marginal revenue. The S' curve begins to
diverge from S at the level of MHI lending for which CRA requirements
become binding.
In our example, with a CRA requirement that low-income loans
account for 15 percent of all loans, the point of divergence is 567 MHI
loans. If the rate of interest is such that the bank wishes to make only
567 loans--[R'.sub.H] in Figure 2b--it will not be required to make
any low-income loans for which costs exceed interest earnings. At 567
MHI loans the bank can make 100 low-income loans [100/(567 + 100) = 15
percent], exactly the number of low-income loans it would make without a
CRA requirement.
If the market rate of interest for MHI loans is above
[R'.sub.H], the bank will find its most profitable combination of
MHI and low-income lending to include more than 567 MHI loans and,
because of CRA, more than 100 low-income loans. Since the S' curve
represents not only the costs of making MHI loans, but also the losses
generated by whatever quantity of low-income loans are called forth by
the profit-maximizing level of MHI loans, it represents the bank's
most profitable levels of high-income lending, given CRA. (6)
Banking Industry and Nonbank Competition
Banks today compete with nonbanks in most banking-product markets
(see Increased Competition from Nonbanks in Table 1). For example,
securities brokers offer money market mutual funds, for some customers
an attractive alternative to holding a deposit account at a bank.
Likewise, finance companies offer consumer and business loans, and
nonbank mortgage lenders offer residential mortgage loans, all in
competition with similar loan products offered by banks. These nonbank
competitors are free from CRA requirements. With nonbank competitors
present, regulators face limits on their ability to employ CRA
requirements to expand low-income lending; limits are present but less
severe in the absence of nonbanks.
Figure 3 depicts the banking industry's cost curves for MHI
loans--[S.sub.BI] without CRA and [S'.sub.BI] when subject to CRA,
with no nonbanks present. These curves represent the horizontal
summation of individual bank MHI cost curves like those shown in Figure
2b. Bank cost curves vary and are a function of many factors, including
bank size. (7) The demand curve for MHI loans is given by [D.sub.BI] in
Figure 3. Unlike the single bank's demand curves in Figures 1 and
2, the industry demand curve is downward sloping. The market interest
rate, given CRA, is [R.sub.BI], determined where the [S'.sub.BI],
and [D.sub.BI] curves intersect. The quantity of MHI loans made is
[Q.sub.BI].
Nonbank competitors are introduced in our analysis in Figures 4a
through 4c. Figure 4a depicts the banking industry's supply curves,
which are like those in Figure 3. Figure 4b shows the supply curve,
[S.sub.N], for nonbanks. We assume that nonbanks have the same cost
structure as banks but are not subject to CRA, so the [S.sub.N] curve is
an exact replica of the [S.sub.BI], curve in Figure 4a. (8) The
financial industry supply curve [S.sub.FI] in Figure 4c is the
horizontal summation of the nonbanks' supply curve [S.sub.N] and
the banks' supply curve [S'.sub.BI] reflecting CRA costs. The
second supply curve, [S'.sub.FI], in Figure 4c, represents a
summation of bank and nonbank supply curves in a theoretical case in
which nonbanks are subject to CRA and have supply curves like
[S'.sub.BI] in Figure 4a. In this scenario, all firms incur higher
costs because of CRA and thus [S'sub.FI], lies above [S.sub.FI]. By
comparing interest rates and loan quantities when the supply curve is
[S'.sub.FI] with rates and quan tities when the supply curve is
[S.sub.FI], we can illustrate changes that result when firms not subject
to CRA are introduced. The industry price and quantity are found at the
intersection of the [D.sub.FI] and [S.sub.FI] curves in Figure
4c--interest rate [R.sub.FI] and quantity [Q.sub.FI]. Because [S.sub.FI]
lies below and to the right of [S.sub.FI], [R.sub.FI] is lower than
[R'.sub.FI].
At the market interest rate of [R.sub.FI] in Figure 4a, banks will
make [Q.sub.BI] loans, as determined by the intersection of the
[S'.sub.BI] curve and the market interest rate of [R.sub.FI] that
was determined in Figure 4c. In contrast, if banks face only competitors
that are subject to CRA, the market interest rate is [R'.sub.FI]
(as determined in Figure 4c), and the quantity of bank loans is higher
at [Q'.sub.BI] in Figure 4a. The lower market interest rate
[R.sub.FI] reflects the presence of nonbank competitors, not subject to
CRA, and causes banks to make fewer loans. In addition, the size of the
CRA subsidy is lower in the presence of nonbank competitors. Without
these nonbanks, the subsidy is the ABC triangle in Figure 4a; with
nonbank competitors, the subsidy is the smaller triangle ADE.
This CRA subsidy represents the transfer of costs from low-income
to high-income borrowers. The subsidy is due to CRA's lending
requirement, which results in low-income borrowers receiving loans at
prices below banks' marginal cost of making the loans. While
low-income borrowers benefit, high-income borrowers that receive a bank
loan pay more than they would have paid in the absence of the CRA
requirement.
Implications for Expansion of CRA
In addition to reducing a bank's MHI lending, the presence of
nonbank competitors not subject to CRA is likely to diminish the
effectiveness of CRA as a tool for expanding lending to low-income
borrowers. Specifically, an increase in the stringency of CRA
requirements in the presence of nonbank competitors will result in a
smaller dollar amount of funds available for low-income lending.
The following example illustrates this constraint on
regulators' ability to expand low-income lending. Assume first that
banks are the only type of financial institution in the industry. With
an [S'.sub.BI] only slightly above [S.sub.BI] in Figure 4a, meaning
a CRA requirement causes banks to make only a small number of low-income
loans above the quantity they would make without the requirement, the
subsidy is small. The size of the subsidy will initially increase, but
as the CRA requirement becomes more stringent, the subsidy will decline.
In graphical terms, as the [S'.sub.BI] curve swings
counterclockwise and away from [S.sub.BI]--that is, CRA requirements
become more stringent--the area of the ABC triangle increases at first,
then later decreases. (9) The area will shrink as the [S'.sub.BI]
curve becomes ever more vertical because the BC side of the triangle
draws near point A of the triangle.
But with nonbanks competing with banks and attracting their
customers, the market rate of interest will rise less than it would in
the absence of nonbanks for any given increase in CRA stringency. The
smaller increase occurs because the nonbanks' supply curve is
unaffected by the increased stringency. As a result, [S.sub.FI] in
Figure 4c, derived by summing banks' [S'.sub.BI] curve from
Figure 4a and nonbanks' [S.sub.N] curve from Figure 4b, does not
swing as far as the [S'.sub.BI] curve because its swing is damped
by the stable nonbank curve. Thus, the interest rate changes little.
Because the market interest rate rises less, the height of the BC side
of the triangle in Figure 4a is also smaller in the presence of
nonbanks. The ability of regulators to enlarge the size of the
subsidy--i.e., the size of the triangle--is diminished by the existence
of nonbanks.
Policymakers interested in assisting communities by expanding
lending therefore face very real constraints. They could impose stricter
requirements on banks in order to generate greater CRA lending benefits.
For example, they might require that low-income loans account for 20
percent of total loans, rather than the 15 percent in our earlier
example. However, stricter requirements eventually produce a declining
subsidy as the quantity of MHI loans made by banks declines and nonbank
competitors acquire more of the banks' customers.
2. CRA IN PRACTICE
The graphical analysis in Section 1 captures the essential elements
of CRA's low-income lending requirement. (10) However, there are
two critical assumptions that need further elaboration. The analysis
assumes that regulators expect banks to match or exceed a specific ratio
of low-income lending to total lending. While this ratio is a simple
statistic and only one of several indicators considered in a fairly
complex CRA lending review, it provides regulators with an important
benchmark of acceptable lending practice. The graphical analysis also
assumes that absent CRA, banks would extend all the profitable
low-income loans possible, and it thus implies that CRA causes banks to
make unprofitable loans. Since the banking industry is currently quite
competitive, and there is little evidence of discrimination based on
geographical location, we believe our assumptions are reasonable in
today's banking environment. These assumptions are explained in
more detail below.
CRA Enforcement and Lending Ratios
The Community Reinvestment Act requires regulators to "assess
the [bank's] record of meeting the credit needs of its entire
community, including lowand moderate-income neighborhoods," and to
"take such record into account" when evaluating a bank's
merger application (12 U.S.C. 2901, sec. 804). Federal bank regulators
make their assessment, assigning a bank one of four ratings: (1)
substantial noncompliance, (2) needs to improve, (3) satisfactory, and
(4) outstanding. Banks that receive low ratings are likely to have
difficulty convincing regulators to approve merger applications. Thus,
banks anticipating future mergers will tend to make at least enough
low-and moderate-income loans to ensure that a merger will not be
denied, which for some banks will likely involve an expansion in
lower-income lending beyond the level they would choose in the absence
of the Act. While the CRA regulations require examination of a
bank's record of meeting the credit needs of its "entire
community," the intent is clearly to prom ote more lending in low-
to moderate-income communities. For example, the Federal Reserve's
Regulation BB specifies "a very poor geographic distribution of
loans, particularly to low- or moderate-income geographies"
(emphasis added) as one of the factors that can cause a bank to receive
a rating of substantial noncompliance. The Act also requires examiners
to evaluate banks' efforts at meeting the "credit needs"
of the community, which includes lending and investments, but the CRA
rating is most dependent on lending. (11)
The discussion in Section 1 suggests that CRA examiners require
banks to achieve a certain minimum ratio of low-income lending to total
lending. And in practice, CRA examiners do calculate the ratio of a
bank's low-income lending to total lending and compare that figure
to the proportion of low-income population to total population in the
bank's assessment area as a rough benchmark of appropriate lending
procedures. (12) Examiners recognize, however, that there might be
legitimate reasons why a bank's low-income lending would not be
proportional to the low-income population. For example, examiners will
take into consideration the prevalence of rental housing in an area when
examining a bank's mortgage lending patterns, since the demand for
mortgage lending would likely be lower in areas with a high proportion
of rental properties. Likewise, adjustments are made for areas where
income levels are extremely low or unemployment is high, since
individuals with very low incomes or those that are unemployed are unli
kely to be willing or able to borrow.
Still, in general, given these adjustments, if low-income
households compose 20 percent of the population in the bank's
assessment area, then examiners expect approximately 20 percent of the
bank's total loans to be made to low-income households. Barring
unusual circumstances, if the bank increases its total loans, it will be
expected to increase its low-income loans proportionally. Our assumption
of a fixed proportion of low-income loans to other loans in the
graphical analysis reflects this regulatory approach to CRA enforcement.
(13) Whenever the bank considers making a loan that does not qualify for
CRA credit--say, a loan to an individual in a high-income community--it
will take into account that it will also be required to add to its
low-income lending.
Does CRA Encourage Unprofitable Lending?
Without a doubt CRA has increased low-income lending (Litan et al.
2001). If in the absence of CRA, however, banks would have extended all
profitable loans possible, then it is likely that the Act has resulted
in at least some unprofitable loans. (14) Given the competitive nature
of today's banking industry, it is hard to imagine that banks would
overlook many opportunities to make additional profitable loans. When
CRA was enacted in 1977, substantial regulatory restrictions on entry
and pricing allowed some banks to exercise monopoly power in local
banking markets. In such cases bankers would be expected to exploit
monopoly power by restricting lending. If banks did restrict loans, it
seems plausible that they would tend to prefer higher-income lending at
the expense of low-income lending. Today, however, there are fewer entry
and pricing restrictions in the banking industry, so monopoly power is
likely to be quite limited. (See Table 1 for a review of competition in
banking.)
Of course, one could argue that even in competitive markets, some
banks might nevertheless prefer to avoid lending in certain low-income
neighborhoods because of a bias against minorities predominant in a
neighborhood or because of a lack of experience in lending to low-income
borrowers, for example. Although not conclusive, a number of studies
suggest there is little evidence of such failure to lend to individuals
in low-income communities. (15) So, once again, in the absence of CRA we
would expect banks to make all possible profitable loans, and if our
expectation were met, CRA pressures to extend lending would produce
unprofitable loans.
CRA may also be causing more low-income lending than is profitable
because regulations generally do not make exceptions for differences in
business strategies, market niches, or capabilities. Some banks are
simply less adept at lending in low-income communities than others. For
example, certain banks are especially skilled at making loans and
gathering deposits from individuals in high-income communities or
providing personal banking services to high-income individuals and make
these services a large part of their deposits and loans. For such banks,
CRA requires an expansion of low-income lending beyond the
profit-maximizing equilibrium, acting as a tax on such banks'
high-income lending. While one might imagine that there are few niche
banks that specialize in personal banking, all banks will be on a
continuum from those most capable at low-income lending to those most
capable at high-income lending. (16)
Recently the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
surveyed banks in order to quantify the profitability of CRA lending.
Profitability in the Board study was measured in terms of accounting
profits, that is, return on equity. The Board asked respondents to
measure profits based on revenues and costs associated with such items
as overhead and the servicing, pricing, delinquency, and prepayment of
CRA loans (Board of Governors 2000b). This definition of profitability
differs from that used in Section 1, where profitability is defined as
the difference between marginal revenue and marginal cost. The Board
survey found that bank loans that qualify for CRA credit are profitable
for most banks, with many institutions reporting that they are as
profitable as comparable non-CRA loans. However, a high proportion of
institutions reported that CRA loans are less profitable (44 percent of
institutions in the case of home mortgage lending), and almost none
reported them as more profitable.
Yet, to answer our question regarding unprofitable lending, we must
move beyond an examination of the average profitability of all CRA loans
and examine only those low-income loans that are made simply because of
the presence of the Act. In other words, in the absence of CRA, banks
would make a certain number of low-income loans, but only if these loans
were expected to be profitable. The Act may require banks to make
additional loans that are unprofitable. The average profitability of all
low-income loans might be positive even if banks make unprofitable loans
in response to CRA. So while the Board study does not answer our
question, the fact that CRA loans are often less profitable suggests
that unprofitable loans may be lowering the average. Given the
competitive nature of the banking industry, we believe it is reasonable
to assume that CRA encourages banks to make unprofitable loans.
Still, no industry is perfectly competitive. And the banking
industry has some characteristics suggesting that it is no exception,
despite the fact that its competition is quite strong. For example,
observers have noted that switching costs may be significant in banking,
meaning that it is costly for a consumer to change banks to take
advantage of a superior interest rate or lower fee (Rhoades 2000).
Switching costs might be significant for a consumer because shifting
transaction accounts to a different bank would require the consumer to
contact his or her employer, utilities, and mortgage company to modify
direct deposit and direct withdrawal arrangements. As a result of
switching costs, banks might exercise some pricing power over existing
customers, providing a source of supracompetitive profits. If banks
enjoy a measure of monopoly power in pricing, then some of the
additional low-income loans CRA will induce are not necessarily
unprofitable. Nevertheless, even if banks do not lose money on these
addition al loans, the requirement to make additional loans will lower
profits below the bank's profit-maximizing level of lending, and
the economic analysis found in Section 1 of this article will be
unaffected. Because profits are diminished for each additional CRA loan
beyond the profit-maximizing quantity, banks will take account of the
lost profits when deciding to make an MHI loan. Accordingly, a CRA
requirement will mean an increase in the marginal cost of making MHI
loans, or equivalently a leftward shift in the supply curves for bank
MHI lending in the graphs.
3. EFFICIENCY AND EQUITY
While CRA has expanded lending in low-income neighborhoods, any
benefit derived from the expansion may be offset by costs resulting from
less efficient credit markets. Furthermore, some costs CRA imposes may
be borne disproportionately by low-income individuals. The expansion of
lending to low-income communities distorts credit decisions on loans
made to individuals and businesses in both low- and high-income
communities. At the same time, CRA can place banks at a cost
disadvantage in relation to nonbanks, which are not subject to CRA,
further distorting the market. Banks will attempt to shift the costs of
making unprofitable loans to those customers who have the fewest
alternatives to bank products. (17) Since low-income individuals
frequently have few alternatives, they will tend to bear more than their
share of such costs.
Efficiency Losses
Efficiency losses occur for several reasons. Imagine that one of
the 50 borrowers discussed in Section 1 is a small-business owner in a
low-income community who plans to undertake a project that will produce
a rate of return equal to [R.dub.L] in Figure 2a. Consequently, this
borrower is willing and able to pay an interest rate as high as
[R.sub.L] to borrow to fund the project. But the bank, having already
made 100 loans, finds that its cost of making this 101st loan is greater
than [R.sub.L], as indicated by the S curve above [R.sub.L]. The 101st
loan is inefficient and results in a wasteful misallocation of resources
inasmuch as costs exceed benefits as measured by the loan's rate of
return. Because of CRA, the project is undertaken by the business owner,
even though the project's economic benefits--as measured by the
income the owner earns on the project--are smaller than the costs of the
resources employed to fund it. This project is funded, but the resources
could be employed elsewhere in a project that delivers benefits
exceeding resource costs.
To illustrate the second source of inefficiency, imagine an owner
of a business in a high-income community. This business owner, with a
project capable of earning more than [R.sub.H], would have received a
loan if the bank's cost curve had been S in Figure 2b. Instead,
however, the loan is denied. The bank will make 900 loans if its cost
curve is S, but only 850 loans if S'. As a result, the economic
benefits from the project in the high-income community are unrealized.
A third type of inefficiency arises because CRA requirements result
in less business for banks and more business for other, less efficient
providers. While in Section 1 we assumed that costs of making
unprofitable loans are borne by high-income borrowers, banks may shift
some of these costs to depositors as well. The costs imposed by CRA,
shifted to depositors in the form of lower interest rates paid by banks
on deposits, means some individuals will elect to hold their
transactions accounts in other places, such as money market mutual funds
(MMMFs). Yet using a MMMF for payments purposes can be far less
convenient than using a bank account and may result in an inefficient
use of the individual's resources. Firms offering MMMFs typically
do not have as many branches as banks, nor do they offer widespread ATM
networks. Further, such firms often impose a minimum check size
requirement on MMMFs, making such accounts more difficult to use for
day-to-day purchases. While the consumer is willing to tolerate these in
conveniences to earn the higher rate paid by the MMMF, the
inconveniences would have been avoided if CRA had not led the bank to
pay lower rates.
Furthermore, observers have often argued that banks can be
especially effective lenders because they have access to information
about borrowers' finances that allows them to better assess
creditworthiness. For example, because bank borrowers often hold
transactions accounts with the same bank, banks have unique access to
information about the financial health of borrowers. But if such
transaction deposit relationships are severed because banks lose
customers by paying lower interest rates on deposits as a result of CRA,
then this information will be lost. Such information is valuable because
it lowers the cost of making loan decisions. If lost, the economy's
resources are wasted, either because more resources are consumed by
making lending decisions or because less creditworthy projects are
funded.
Equity
While CRA is intended to benefit low-income communities by ensuring
that banks do not overlook them, the law may at the same time impose
additional costs on low-income individuals. Some of the costs of such
lending will tend to be shifted to depositors in the form of lower
interest rates or perhaps higher fees on transactions deposits. In
effect, individuals holding transactions accounts are taxed so that more
CRA loans can be made.
Such a tax may fall more heavily on low-income and minority
individuals. High-income individuals hold a smaller percentage of their
wealth in the form of checking account deposits than do low-income, and
whites hold a smaller percentage than do nonwhites (Davern and Fisher
2001, Tables 1 and H). While CRA may produce additional loans for such
individuals, it also tends to tax them.
4. WHY HAS CRA SURVIVED?
Why has CRA survived despite the presence of nonbank competitors
who can offer lower prices since they avoid cost shifts inherent in
CRA's low-income lending requirements? After all, in a number of
other regulated industries, most notably telecommunications and
airlines, the entry of unregulated competitors made it difficult to
pursue social objectives that require firms to shift costs from one
customer group to another.
In the telecommunications industry, regulators were forced to slash
telephone-rate subsidies as competition became more intense and
deregulatory policies were implemented. Kahn (1990, 343) argues that
during the 1980s the prices of long-distance service calling and basic
residential service were brought closer to their respective costs. He
provides as evidence an increase in the local telephone charges
component of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and a decline in the average
price of long-distance calling from December 1983 to December 1989.
Local telephone charges rose 19.3 percent in real terms, while average
long-distance charges fell 44.5 percent interstate, and 24.1 percent
intrastate, respectively, during the period. Temin (1990, 350) cites
telephone price data from the CPI for 1977-1987 that show a sharp rise
in the ratio of local to interstate telephone rates during the
post-AT&T divestiture period of 1983-1987 and concludes that cross
subsidies from long-distance to local calls were reduced but not el
iminated.
In the airline industry, average airfares fell and fare subsidies
diminished when the industry was deregulated in 1978 and prices began to
be set in competitive markets. Prior to deregulation, fares on longer
and more heavily traveled routes had been too high relative to costs,
while fares on shorter and less heavily traveled routes had been too
low; in effect, heavily traveled routes subsidized less-traveled routes
(Joskow and Rose 1989, 1469). Airfares were declining prior to
deregulation and the entry of new competitors, but the decline in real
airfares was quicker and larger once the industry was deregulated
(Winston 1998, 100). Morrison and Winston (1998, 484) estimate that
average airline fares are approximately 33 percent lower in real terms
since deregulation. But declines in airfares at airports in smaller
communities--those designated as small hub or nonhub airports by the
Federal Aviation Administration--were consistently smaller than declines
in fares at airports in larger communities during the p ost-deregulation
(1978-1996) period (Morrison and Winston 1997, 43). Despite continued
interest in maintaining low rates at smaller community airports,
competition today will not allow the subsidies that could make this
possible.
If banking followed the trend in the telecommunications and airline
industries, one would expect CRA's influence on bank lending to
have declined, but it has not. Two factors may help to explain
CRA's resilience. First, banks maintain some competitive advantages
compared to their unregulated competitors despite aggressive
competition. These advantages allow banks to shift costs to certain bank
customers and hold at bay nonbanks, which would otherwise lure bank
customers with lower prices and cause CRA's low-income lending
requirements to collapse. Second, as a practical matter, CRA low-income
lending requirements may not impose large costs. Both factors are
further discussed below.
CRA Costs Can Be Shifted If Banks Have Competitive Advantages
Among financial institutions, banks are unique in offering
transaction deposits and widespread branch facilities to provide
convenient deposit and withdrawal. While there are nonbank alternatives
to transaction deposits--money market mutual funds for example--for most
individuals the alternatives cannot completely substitute for a bank
deposit account. According to the 1998 Board of Governors Survey of
Consumer Finances, 90 percent of households have a bank transactions
account, while only 16 percent have any kind of mutual fund (Kennickell,
Starr-McCluer, and Surette 2000, 11). Because nonbank alternatives offer
only imperfect substitutes for bank deposits, banks have greater leeway to charge higher prices for these accounts without incurring a loss of
customers to nonbank competitors. As a result, some of CRA's cost
of making unprofitable low-income loans can be shifted to holders of
transaction accounts with little loss of these customers to nonbank
competitors. As long as such shifts are possible, banks h ave less
incentive to lobby for repeal of CRA.
CRA's costs might also be shifted to small-business borrowers.
Observers argue that banks may hold a competitive edge in lending to
small businesses because of long-standing relationships with these
borrowers. The special lending skills that bank loan officers have
developed over the years and the credit information that is obtained
through long-standing relationships are difficult for nonbanks to
acquire. While this competitive advantage may erode, it could be some
time before nonbanks are on an equal footing with banks in the quality
of lending services they offer.
CRA May Impose Relatively Small Costs
Although CRA has undoubtedly resulted in an overall increase in
low-income lending, at many banks the increase may have been relatively
small. If CRA has caused only minor changes in bank behavior, banks are
at little disadvantage to nonbank competitors because of the Act.
There is some empirical evidence to support the notion that the
CRA-induced increase in low-income lending by banks has been fairly
small. Evan-off and Segal (1996, 32) find that during the 1980s, growth
of low-income mortgage lending by banks lagged growth of middle- and
high-income lending. According to Litan et al. (2001,26), from 1993
through 1999, low-income home purchase loans at institutions subject to
CRA rose from 31.5 percent to 35.0 percent of total mortgage loans.
Mortgage lending, the focus of CRA lending, accounts for only 15 percent
of the average bank's assets, so as a percentage of bank assets the
change in the 1990s was fairly small. (18) Moreover, a good bit of this
increase seems to have been accounted for by factors outside of pressure
brought by CRA regulations, for example by declining costs of lending to
low-income borrowers. Such declines may be the result of improvements in
the quality of information available to lenders on such borrowers.
Low-income lending by firms not subject to C RA grew even more rapidly
than such lending by banks, suggesting that factors other than CRA have
increased the attractiveness of low-income lending. For these nonbank
institutions, low-income loans grew by 30 percent from 1993 to 1997
(Gunther 2000, 58).
So why haven't CRA regulations resulted in more low-income
lending? In part because regulators must balance two conflicting goals
when enforcing CRA: expanding low-income lending and assuring bank
safety and soundness. The Act requires that additional loans be made
only to the extent "consistent with safe and sound [bank]
operation" (12 U.S.C. 2901). Thus, one would expect regulators to
be reluctant to push banks too far in providing support for community
development. Large increases in low-income lending imply a substantial
reduction in profits or even losses for the bank. Because bank
regulators are not only responsible for encouraging low-income lending
but also for enforcing safety and soundness requirements, they are
understandably loath to take steps that could undermine soundness. (19)
5. CONCLUSION
There is broad support for efforts to revitalize distressed
low-income communities. A partnership of private and public interests as
represented by CRA is considered by many an ideal way to accomplish this
social goal. While a direct government transfer program might provide
the needed funds, private organizations bring a business acumen honed
from experience operating in a competitive marketplace. Furthermore, if
private firms can contribute to community development, then government
budgets are less burdened. But there can also be serious problems in
relying on private efforts mandated by legislation. In the case of CRA,
a requirement to expand lending in low-income communities may in some
circumstances distort credit markets: projects for which costs exceed
benefits are undertaken, and projects are rejected when benefits exceed
costs. Further, CRA's costs may result in banks losing business to
firms that are less efficient at providing deposit and lending services.
While some would like banks to play a greater role in community
revitalization, a more aggressive low-income lending policy that further
disadvantages banks relative to unregulated competitors would be hard to
sustain. CRA will likely survive in a more competitive economy as a tool
to fight discrimination against low-income neighborhoods, but those who
expect CRA to play a growing role in community development funding may
be disappointed.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
Table 1 The Growth of Competition in Banking
Banking industry competition became more intense starting in the
late 1970s for two reasons. First, the banking industry itself became
more competitive as entry barriers were dropped, branching restrictions
were removed, and interest rate restrictions fell. Second, banks faced
mounting competition from nonbank competitors.
Barriers to Entry Fall
* After the massive bank failures of the Great Depression, fairly
strict requirements were imposed on the granting of bank charters.
* The Comptroller of the Currency (Comptroller) denied applications
for national bank charters when it determined that existing banks
already adequately served markets. State banking authorities operated in
a similar manner.
* In October 1980 the Comptroller ended its policy of assessing the
competitiveness of markets when making charter decisions.
Branching Restrictions Fall
* Federal and state restrictions on banks' ability to branch
were an important feature of the U.S. banking environment throughout the
20th century. Restrictions protected existing banks from competition.
* In addition to restrictions on bank branching, the ability of
bank holding companies (BHCs) to operate across state lines was also
restricted. The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 largely prohibited bank
holding companies from owning banks outside the BHC's headquarters
state, but included a provision allowing ownership of banks across state
lines if legislation in the non-headquarters state specifically provided
for such rights. No states had such legislation.
* Interstate banking restrictions began to fall when, in 1978,
Maine became the first state to pass legislation to allow BHCs
headquartered in other states to purchase banks in its state. Other
states followed suit, so that by 1990 all but four states allowed
cross-border purchases--though interstate branching remained largely
prohibited.
* In the early 1980s states began to remove restrictions on
in-state bank branching.
* The Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking Act of 1994 largely eliminated
restrictions on interstate branching.
Interest Rate Ceilings Fall
* The Banking Act of 1933 prohibited the payment of interest on
checking accounts and authorized the Federal Reserve to regulate
interest rates on time and savings deposits.
* Interest rate ceilings were initially set well above the interest
rates banks were paying.
* Beginning in the mid-1960s the situation changed. Ceilings were
set below market rates beginning in mid-1966 and generally remained
below market rates until ceilings were eliminated in the mid-1980s.
Ceilings were viewed at the time as a means of enhancing the flow of
loans to mortgage borrowers. In effect, when market interest rates rose
above the ceilings, depositors cross-subsidized mortgage borrowers.
* Bank depositors responded by moving their funds to money market
mutual funds (MMMFs), and these funds grew rapidly in the 1970s.
* In March 1980 Congress responded by passing the Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act, which phased out all
interest ceilings on savings and time deposits and authorized banks
nationwide to pay interest on a new type of checking account, the
Negotiable Order of Withdrawal (NOW) account. NOW accounts had
previously only been available in certain states.
Increased Competition from Nonbanks
* Companies offering MMMFs compete with banks for consumer and
business savings and checkable deposits. MMMFs gained prominence in the
late 1970s. By the end of 1999, MMMF balances amounted to $1.46
trillion. This compares to $4.54 trillion in deposits at banks and
savings institutions as of the end of 1999.
* Competition for loans increased as well. Large businesses can
borrow by issuing commercial paper, and commercial paper as a source of
funds has grown rapidly. Commercial paper outstanding in 1975 was $48
billion; as of the end of 1999 it totaled $1.4 trillion. In comparison,
all business loans made by banks and savings institutions summed to $1.0
trillion.
* Nonbank lenders play an important and growing role in serving
businesses that are too small to effectively borrow in the commercial
paper market. As of 1993, such lending accounted for 35 percent of
credit extended to small businesses.
* Nonbanks have made important inroads in consumer lending,
accounting for 58 percent of such loans in 1998.
Sources: Board of Governors, Federal Reserve Bulletin (2000a),
Tables 1.21 and 1.32; Cole and Wolken (1996); Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (1999); Gilbert (1986); Hahn (1983); Kennickell,
Starr-McCluer, and Surette (2000); Robertson (1995).
(1.) All depository institutions except credit unions are subject
to CRA regulations--i.e., CRA is applicable to commercial banks, savings
banks, and savings and loans. Throughout this article the simpler term
banks will be substituted for depository institutions.
(2.) The CRA regulations define four income categories (see, for
example, Board of Governors Regulation BB). A low-income individual or
family is one with income less than 50 percent of area median income.
Moderate income is income that is at least 50 percent and less than 80
percent of area median income. Middle income is at least 80 percent and
less than 120 percent of median income. Upper income is 120 percent or
more of median income. In our model the phrase low-income corresponds to
the low- and moderate-income categories in the regulations, while
middle- to high-income (MHI) corresponds to the two higher-income
categories.
(3.) California regulations have since been modified to allow
manufacturers to meet the percentage requirements with a combination of
ZEVs and very low emission vehicles. ZEV mandates were adjusted to allow
manufacturers to receive partial credit for extremely low emission
vehicles that were not pure ZEVs. See California Environmental
Protection Agency (2001).
(4.) While in Figure 1a, and throughout the article, the supply
curve is represented as equivalent to the marginal cost curve, this is a
simplification. A firm's output also depends on its average
variable cost curve. The supply curve would be equivalent to the
marginal cost curve only at market prices above the intersection of the
marginal and average variable cost curves.
(5.) For expository purposes, we represent the supply and demand
curves of all other loan markets by the supply and demand curves of
Figure 1b, even though each type of loan has its own supply and demand
curves.
(6.) In Figures 2a and 2b we have assumed that the bank will
continue to make a total of 1,000 loans (150 low-income and 850 MHI)
after CRA is imposed. By imposing an additional cost on banks, CRA may
instead result in a decline in total bank lending below 1,000 loans.
Such a decline in total lending does not change the conclusion that a
low-income requirement raises the effective cost of high-income lending.
(7.) Only banks with minimum average cost at or below the market
price can earn a profit, so only such banks will be present.
(8.) For expository purposes we have assumed that the cost
structures of banks and nonbanks are the same. Such an assumption means,
however, other things being equal, that banks would immediately convert
to nonbank status if they were able to do so costlessly and could avoid
CRA by converting. In practice, banks may not want to convert because
they hold certain advantages as banks. Some observers maintain that
transactions accounts offer banks a low-cost source of funds. While some
nonbanks offer accounts with certain transaction features, accounts at
nonbanks typically do not provide all of the payments features of a hank checking account. Further, banks may have cost advantages because of
special lending skills, access to information not available to nonbanks,
or access to what some argue is underpriced deposit insurance. A lower
cost curve may allow banks to continue to compete successfully against
nonbanks despite the costs that CRA imposes on high-income lending, so
banks would not choose to convert to n onbank status. In Section 4 we
provide further discussion of possible bank cost advantages.
(9.) In addition, as CRA requirements become more stringent, point
A in Figure 4a shifts along the [S.sub.BI] curve toward the origin.
Point A represents the level of lending at which CRA requirements become
binding. In this graph this point shifts toward the origin as the
required minimum ratio of low-income loans to total loans is increased.
(10.) While our article focuses on CRA's low-income lending
requirement, CRA enforcement also seeks to encourage expanded lending
within banks' local markets as well as expanded small-business and
small-farm lending. Measuring such lending by each bank and basing the
bank's CRA rating, in part, on these types of lending provide the
encouragement.
(11.) Large banks are rated based on three tests: a lending test,
and investment test, and a service test. On each of the three tests, the
bank receives a rating. The lending test, however, is predominant. A
bank's numerical score on the lending test receives twice the
weight of scores on either the investment or service tests before these
three scores are summed to obtain the composite CRA score (FFIEC 1997,
15-16). Small bank CRA ratings generally depend only on lending, though
investment and service activities can earn the small bank extra credit
toward its final rating.
(12.) The shorter term low-income will be used in place of the term
low- and moderate-income throughout the remainder of the article.
(13.) CRA performance evaluations for individual banks are
available from websites maintained by the federal agencies that regulate
banks. These evaluations provide a fairly detailed explanation of the
factors examiners consider important in the determination of a CRA
rating. An evaluation typically provides a calculation of the
bank's proportion of low-income lending to total lending, which is
compared to the proportion of low-income households in the assessment
area. These evaluations often note when the two proportions are very
different.
(14.) See, for example, Gramlich (2001).
(15.) For reviews of the literature on geographic discrimination,
see Lacker (1994, 6-9) and Evanoff and Segal (1996, 24-25).
(16.) In some cases, a bank can improve its CRA rating not only by
making low-income loans but also by purchasing such loans made by other
lenders. If a niche bank, for example, is able to purchase low-income
loans from a lender specializing in making such loans, then the cost
imposed by CRA on the niche bank might be lowered.
(17.) For an example of cost shifting in banking see Fama (1985),
who discusses banks shifting their reserve requirement costs to
customers with the fewest alternatives.
(18.) Since banks often sell a large proportion of their mortgage
loans in the secondary market, the proportion of mortgage loans to total
assets tends to understate the importance of earnings from mortgage
lending for bank profitability.
(19.) Gunther (1999) discusses the conflict between encouraging
low-income lending and promoting safety and soundness. He provides
evidence, at least for small banks, of the conflict between enforcement
of safety and soundness standards and CRA compliance.
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The authors benefited greatly from discussions with Huberto Ennis,
Marvin Goodfriend, Thomas Humphrey, Edward S. Prescott, Daniel Tatar,
and John Weinberg. The views expressed herein axe not necessarily those
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond or the Federal Reserve System.