3.1. GLOBAL BANKING CONSTANTS3.2. STRUCTURE OF THE POST-DEPRESSION BANKING SECTOR3.2.1. Features of the "Old Structure" Still in Place3.2.2. Product Constraints in American Banking3.2.3. Geographic Constraints in American Banking3.2.4. Interest Rate Ceilings on Bank Deposits3.2.5. Reserve Requirements3.2.6. Relationship Banking3.3. FORCES FOR CHANGE IN AMERICAN BANKING IN THE 1980s AND 1990s3.3.1. External Competition3.3.2. Volatility, Risk, and Failure3.4. DEREGULATION, REREGULATION, AND TODAY'S EVOLVING BANKING SYSTEM3.4.1. Deposit Deregulation3.4.2. Risk-Based Capital Standards3.4.3. Technological Progress and Bank Developments3.4.4. Product Deregulation3.4.5. Geographic Deregulation3.4.6. Results of Geographic Deregulation3.5. THE AMERICAN BANKING SYSTEM WILL CONTINUE TO BE UNIQUE3.5.1. The Outlook for Dual Banking3.5.2. Continued Technological Advances in Risk Control3.5.3. The Future U.S. Regulatory Structure3.5.4. The Continued Separation of Depositories from Nonfinancial Firms3.6. SUMMARY3.7. REFERENCES