People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.

Financial globalization and international migration have altered the socio-economic-demographic make-up as well as the financial dynamics in immigrant receiving countries. An outcome is the emergence or strengthening of a formal ethnic financial sector consisting of financial institutions that are o...

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Main Authors: Lucia Lo, Wei Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies 2008-12-01
Series:Migracijske i Etniĉke Teme
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/53361
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spelling doaj-13709f97a3c340a7813a1f275dc9ee962020-11-24T23:56:34ZengInstitute for Migration and Ethnic StudiesMigracijske i Etniĉke Teme1333-25461848-91842008-12-01244301321People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.Lucia Lo0Wei Li1York University, Toronto, CanadaArizona State University, Tempe, USAFinancial globalization and international migration have altered the socio-economic-demographic make-up as well as the financial dynamics in immigrant receiving countries. An outcome is the emergence or strengthening of a formal ethnic financial sector consisting of financial institutions that are owned and/or operated by a variety of ethnic groups. Focusing on ethnic banks in Los Angeles, USA and ethnic credit unions in Toronto, Canada, and using secondary sources and interviews with bank executives, this paper demonstrates that contemporary financial dynamics pertaining to immigration is rooted/localized in different ways with different groups, and is shaped by different regulatory and institutional contexts. Specifically, it identifies that ethnic financial institutions in both cities serve co-ethnics first and foremost, and utilize ethnic assets, bonding social capital in particular, to develop their customer base while branching out to other groups by developing bridging social capital and broadening their product lines. The comparison also shows that ethnic banks in LA are larger, more numerous, and mostly Asian-owned, whereas the ethnic credit unions in Toronto are smaller, less numerous, and mostly of European background. These variations stem from differences in the national financial regulatory regimes and in the immigrant population dynamics.http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/53361ethnic financial institutionsimmigrationethnic assetssocial capitalLos AngelesToronto
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucia Lo
Wei Li
spellingShingle Lucia Lo
Wei Li
People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.
Migracijske i Etniĉke Teme
ethnic financial institutions
immigration
ethnic assets
social capital
Los Angeles
Toronto
author_facet Lucia Lo
Wei Li
author_sort Lucia Lo
title People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.
title_short People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.
title_full People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.
title_fullStr People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.
title_full_unstemmed People – Money Co-movement and the Ethnic Financial Sectors in Canada and the U.S.
title_sort people – money co-movement and the ethnic financial sectors in canada and the u.s.
publisher Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies
series Migracijske i Etniĉke Teme
issn 1333-2546
1848-9184
publishDate 2008-12-01
description Financial globalization and international migration have altered the socio-economic-demographic make-up as well as the financial dynamics in immigrant receiving countries. An outcome is the emergence or strengthening of a formal ethnic financial sector consisting of financial institutions that are owned and/or operated by a variety of ethnic groups. Focusing on ethnic banks in Los Angeles, USA and ethnic credit unions in Toronto, Canada, and using secondary sources and interviews with bank executives, this paper demonstrates that contemporary financial dynamics pertaining to immigration is rooted/localized in different ways with different groups, and is shaped by different regulatory and institutional contexts. Specifically, it identifies that ethnic financial institutions in both cities serve co-ethnics first and foremost, and utilize ethnic assets, bonding social capital in particular, to develop their customer base while branching out to other groups by developing bridging social capital and broadening their product lines. The comparison also shows that ethnic banks in LA are larger, more numerous, and mostly Asian-owned, whereas the ethnic credit unions in Toronto are smaller, less numerous, and mostly of European background. These variations stem from differences in the national financial regulatory regimes and in the immigrant population dynamics.
topic ethnic financial institutions
immigration
ethnic assets
social capital
Los Angeles
Toronto
url http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/53361
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