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Research Article

U.S. Minority Depository Institutions at the Dawn of the Twenty-First Century

, &
Pages 243-261
Received 01 Feb 2017
Accepted 24 Jun 2017
Published online: 10 Aug 2017
 

ABSTRACT

In the current era of intensified global migration and economic change, the simultaneous movement of people, money, services, and information alter the socioeconomic demographic makeup as well as the financial dynamics of countries. Building on our previous work on ethnic banking, this article examines the size, nature, and capacity of the new minority depository institutions (MDIs) in the United States. It identifies the reasons for the establishment of these new MDIs and their distribution in relation to immigration dynamics, and observes the role of social capital in their operation. It finds that contemporary financial dynamics pertaining to immigrants and minorities is rooted and localized in different ways and with different groups. Some MDIs are more globally connected or less locally embedded than others. Their utilization of social capital or ethnic assets also varies. In asserting that global financial situations and global money flows have significantly affected the emergence of MDIs, we suggest some policy interventions to facilitate the healthy growth of MDIs.

Funding

Wei Li and Lucia Lo thank the National Science Foundation of the United States and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for funding our work on banking and immigration in the past decade, and the Rockefeller Foundation's Bellagio Writing Residency Program for supporting our writing collaborations. We also thank the U.S. Federal Reserve System for partial support for the research behind this article. All interpretations and opinions stated in this article are entirely our own, not those of the funders.

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