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About this lesson
grade level: 9-12
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curriculum standards:
9

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author: Council for Economic Education Technology Staff
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posted on: April 16, 1998
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EconomicsMinute

Bank Mergers Lead to Greater Business Concentration

Key Economic Concepts:

Description:

The recent merger between NationsBank and BankAmerica will create the USA's largest bank by the end of the year. This was the third merger in the banking industry within a week, and more are rumored to come. Includes the concepts of types of markets, oligopolies, competition, and business concentration.


Introduction:

bankThe recent merger between NationsBank and BankAmerica will create the USA's largest bank by the end of the year. This was the third merger in the banking industry within a week, and more are rumored to come. A merger occurs when one corporation buys the stock of another. The second firm goes out of existence as a separate corporate entity and all of its properties belong to the remaining firm. What consequences are in store for consumers? How do these mergers change the banking industry?

Process:

Read from the Federal Reserve's 1997 report to Congress on bank fees.www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/RptCongress/feesIndex.htm [1]
Do the data show that multi state banks charge higher or lower fees to its customers?

Increases in business concentration may mean higher prices for the things people buy and reduce the amount of income available to buy other goods and services. Business concentration also has benefits. Can you list some?

 


 

Discuss these questions in light of what you've read:

1. It has been said that the average Americans of today accept big labor / big company price leadership, mergers, etc. as economic facts of life about which they can do very little. Do you agree?

2. Are monopolies and oligopolies a menace to our free enterprise system? Explain.

Links Used:

1. ^ "www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/RptCongress/feesIndex.htm" - (www.federalreserve.gov)


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