“…A large body of scholarship all points to the same conclusions: financial development exerts an independent, causal effect on growth; and banks are a crucial piece of the overall process of financial development -indeed, they typically dominate securities markets during the early stages of economic development. This work includes historical case studies of developed economies (De Vries & van der Woude, 1997;Neal, 1990;Rousseau & Sylla, 2004;Rousseau & Wachtel, 1998;Sylla, 1969Sylla, , 2007; cross-country regressions (Beck, Levine, & Loayza, 2000;King & Levine, 1993a, 1993bLevine & Zervos, 1998); time series analyses of regions within countries (Black & Strahan, 2002;Dehejia & Lleras-Muney, 2007;Guiso, Sapienza, & Zingales, 2004;Jayartne & Strahan, 1996); and time series analysis of industries (Beck & Levine, 2002;Cetorelli & Strahan, 2006;Fisman & Love, 2004;Haber, 1991;Maurer & Haber, 2007;Rajan & Zingales, 1998a;Wurgler, 2000). There are, of course, scholars who are not persuaded by this evidence, and, in light of the recent financial crisis, view the growth of credit as pernicious.…”