Al Drago/Bloomberg
Washington frequently professes its support for community banks, praising their role in sustaining local economies and providing relationship-based credit. Yet the regulatory structure continues to push the smallest institutions
Processing Content
Drawing on the
The message across these expense categories is unmistakable. In banking today, compliance behaves like a fixed cost. It does not scale gracefully; it punishes smallness.
Community banks already operate with constrained economies of scale. Their balance sheets reflect mission rather than complexity — prioritizing local farms, homes and small businesses. They typically maintain higher capital ratios, use little noncore market funding and operate with an intimate knowledge of their customers. Yet these strengths also limit their ability to offset rising fixed costs, making it more difficult to maintain profitability, even in good years. Compliance may be the stiffest fixed cost of all.
The unintended consequence of this regulatory structure is accelerating consolidation. The United States continues to lose community banks at a steady clip, while new bank formation has all but disappeared. With each closure or merger, rural towns and small communities lose a critical artery of credit and financial access. Economic diversity declines. Entrepreneurship stalls. And risk becomes concentrated in fewer, larger institutions — the very opposite of what policymakers claim to desire.
Some policymakers argue that simplifying compliance would weaken consumer protection or financial stability. But this research does not advocate deregulation. It advocates proportional regulation — an alignment between oversight intensity and risk profile. A small community bank does not operate in the same universe as a large regional, nationwide or global institution, yet both are expected to manage regulatory complexity built for the larger firms. Rules designed for systemic giants should not be imposed wholesale on the smallest community lenders. Supervisors should be encouraged to streamline documentation for well-capitalized, low-risk banks, reduce unnecessarily frequent exams and reporting, provide clearer expectations that replace ambiguity with consistency, and actively support technology adoption that lowers compliance costs rather than raising them.
These steps would preserve safeguards while removing a structural penalty on relationship banking.
Financial stability rests on diversity — not homogeneity. A system dominated solely by large banks becomes more fragile, not less. Yet today’s regulatory framework strengthens the largest institutions while squeezing the smallest. Big banks absorb compliance costs and grow larger; small banks absorb compliance costs and disappear. When that dynamic persists long enough, communities lose choices and families lose opportunities. The damage is more than statistical. It is personal — the storefront shuttered for lack of funding, the family farm suddenly without a lender, the prospective first-time homebuyer unable to get a mortgage.
America’s banking system is strongest when it is most diverse — when local institutions stand alongside regional, nationwide and global ones, each serving distinct purposes and communities. If policymakers truly value community banks, they must finally align their regulatory posture with their rhetoric.
The time has come to stop forcing small banks to scale a regulatory mountain built for giants. The evidence is on the table. Whether Washington acts before community banks are regulated out of existence is now a test — not of economic understanding, but of political will.