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Regulatory requirements and onerous supervisory expectations increase compliance costs and disproportionately burden community banks. These burdens diminish community banks’ ability to attract capital, support the financial needs of their customers, serve their communities, and contribute to their local economies.
Large banks have massive, dedicated legal and compliance staff and can more easily absorb regulatory costs. Credit unions and other nonbank institutions, such as industrial loan companies (ILCs) and fintech companies are not subject to the same taxation, laws, and regulations as community banks.
In addition, unreasonable regulatory requirements serve as a barrier to entry for investors who might otherwise contemplate the formation of de novo banks. Without the entry of a sufficient number of de novo banks to offset consolidation, the industry has become progressively more concentrated. Both investment and risk are flowing outside the regulated banking system where non-bank entities are not subject to comparable constraints.