2000
DOI: 10.1111/j.0020-2754.2000.00355.x
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Mutuality, De‐Mutualization and Communities: The Implications of Branch Network Rationalization in the British Building Society Industry

Abstract: The paper examines the withdrawal of branches from local communities by financial institutions. It assesses whether mutually owned building societies are more adept than the former societies that have converted to public limited companies (plcs), or the high street banks, in serving disadvantaged communities. The paper shows that during the mid-1990s: mutual building societies were more likely than former societies that have converted to plcs to maintain their branch network; mutual societies were less likely … Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The physical presence of banks in regions and localities can be a source of major strength. However, as elsewhere (Leyshon and Pollard 2000; Marshall et al. 2000), branches can also become a source of major weakness.…”
Section: Locational Structure Of Domestic Banking Institutionsmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…The physical presence of banks in regions and localities can be a source of major strength. However, as elsewhere (Leyshon and Pollard 2000; Marshall et al. 2000), branches can also become a source of major weakness.…”
Section: Locational Structure Of Domestic Banking Institutionsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Indeed, the operation of the branch network is increasingly seen as costly in comparison with alternative delivery channels such as automated teller machines (ATMs) and telephone banking (Leyshon and Pollard 2000; Marshall and Richardson 1996; Marshall et al. 2000; Pollard 1999), or more recently, Internet banking.…”
Section: Perspectives On the “Locational Structure” Of Financial Servmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The implications of closures for individuals, businesses and communities have been well documented (Argent 2002; Fuller et al 2006; Marshall 2004) and yet, despite an awareness of the negative geographical consequences and the relentless progress of closure programmes in Britain since the late 1980s, the issue of branch closure has become marginalised within policy and academic debates that seek to address the problem of financial exclusion. Although much of the pioneering academic work on financial exclusion was prompted by geographical observations of its uneven incidence (Dymski and Veitch 1996; Leyshon and Thrift 1995; Marshal et al 2000), as researchers from other disciplinary traditions have begun to work in this field so they have tended to downplay the significance of space and place in the production of financial exclusion (see, for example, Devlin 2005). Indeed, by the mid 2000s, the issue of branch closure had waned to such an extent in financial exclusion policy networks that it had been all but excluded as a legitimate concern of public policy.…”
Section: The Materials Erasure Of the Branchmentioning
confidence: 99%