The regime perspective on long-term financial regulatory development suggests that regulations change as a pendulum between the theoretical poles of state and market. Periods of stability are punctuated by periods of instability when shifts between regimes occur. This thesis challenges that perspective by proposing that long-term regulatory development is better understood as a continuous process. Departing from institutional theory, the thesis argues that regulatory change is driven by changes in economic ideas as well as interest group influence. These two are interlinked, as interest groups continually work to promote ideas that benefit their interests.
In three studies, the continuity and change of ideas and interest group influence of the Swedish Bank Act during the twentieth century are investigated. A fourth study looks at regulatory change during crises and external pressure by studying the Swedish capital controls from 1973 until their removal in 1989.
Results show that the ideas underpinning the Swedish Bank Act shifted over time from conservative and moralistic to increasingly liberal, while its overall purpose remained stable. When the Bank Act was established, the Bank Inspection was the most influential institution. Over time, the Bankers’ Association could increase its influence over the Bank Act. In 1968, the banks succeeded in achieving large liberalizations of the Bank Act. The success of the banks in gaining increasing influence is explained by the ideas that were engrained in the Bank Act from its foundation. Even when regulations came under pressure and were adapted, the original ideas of the regulatory institution could not be abandoned. The results thus support that the long-term development of Swedish banking regulation is more a story of increasing interest group influence than that of a swinging pendulum.
ArbetstitelMigrants and Towns: Self-Selection and Occupational Attainment of Rural-Urban Migrants in Swedish History
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Publiceringsdatum2024-08-20 00:00:00
FörfattareJonatan Andersson
erpOwnsPrice Kort BeskrivningAs countries experience structural transformation, a large portion of the rural population migrates to urban areas. A recurring question within social scientific fields, including economics, sociology, and economic history, is whether these migrants witness economic returns from relocating. This dissertation approaches this question by examining the self-selection and occupational attainment of rural-urban migration in Sweden during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century from a micro-level perspective. It consists of one introductory chapter and four research papers. A novel longitudinal database forms the empirical foundation for three out of the four research papers. Paper I investigates the determinants of rural-urban migration in the context of children leaving their parental homes. The results show that migration was selective on socio-economic status for men but not for women and that households engaged in risk-minimizing strategies by sending children of different genders to urban areas. Paper II analyzes the skill attainment of rural-urban migrants in urban areas. Using a difference-in-differences strategy, the results show that rural-urban migrants immediately upgraded their occupations when arriving in urban areas. However, they also witnessed further gains as they spent time in the urban area. Paper III is concerned with the intergenerational mobility of rural-urban return migrant men. I employ a within-household fixed-effects strategy to show that return migrants experienced substantial gains from temporarily moving to urban areas. Paper IV investigates the labor-market assimilation of rural-urban migrants. By contrast to the optimistic findings of the previous papers, I show that migrants never succeeded in converging with urban natives in terms of labor market outcomes. Taken together, the results show that at least migrant men were positively selected on socio-economic background, although most migrants originated in poorer households. Rural-urban migrants succeeded in improving their labor market outcomes after relocating but never reached the same heights as the urban born.
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