2018
DOI: 10.1111/ehr.12736
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International banking and transmission of the 1931 financial crisis

Abstract: In May to July 1931, a series of financial panics shook central Europe before spreading to the rest of the world. This article explores the role of cross‐border banking linkages in propagating the central European crisis to Britain and the US. Using archival bank‐level data, the article documents US and British banks’ exposure to central European frozen credits in 1931. Central European lending was mostly done by large and diversified commercial banks in the US and by small and geographically specialized merch… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Research on the duration of the Great Depression and the constraints of fixed exchange rates under the gold standard was important during public and policy discussions of the slow recovery from the GFC and the ensuing Eurocrisis (Eichengreen 2015). The GFC also stimulated research on booms and financial crises, using comparative perspectives (Schularick and Taylor 2012, Calomiris and Haber 2014, Dimsdale and Hotson 2014, Turner 2014, Bordo, Redish et al 2015, Quinn and Turner 2020) and detailed analysis of individual events (Accominotti 2019). Research on the causes of financial crises, their effects, and policy responses with historical perspectives has continued into the 2020s (Albers 2020, Bent 2020, Lennard 2020, Kenny, Lennard et al 2021, Rockoff 2021.…”
Section: : History As Useful Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on the duration of the Great Depression and the constraints of fixed exchange rates under the gold standard was important during public and policy discussions of the slow recovery from the GFC and the ensuing Eurocrisis (Eichengreen 2015). The GFC also stimulated research on booms and financial crises, using comparative perspectives (Schularick and Taylor 2012, Calomiris and Haber 2014, Dimsdale and Hotson 2014, Turner 2014, Bordo, Redish et al 2015, Quinn and Turner 2020) and detailed analysis of individual events (Accominotti 2019). Research on the causes of financial crises, their effects, and policy responses with historical perspectives has continued into the 2020s (Albers 2020, Bent 2020, Lennard 2020, Kenny, Lennard et al 2021, Rockoff 2021.…”
Section: : History As Useful Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was not a ‘Schwartz’ crisis but a failure of remittance from continental Europe (Roberts 2013). 1931 saw an exchange-rate crisis and not a financial crisis, ‘1931 does not qualify as a financial crisis’ as Schwartz put it (Schwartz 1986, p. 21; Accominotti 2019 offers an alternative approach). Our focus here is on the period when there were several clear financial crises (à la Schwartz) in the nineteenth century, in 1825, 1836–9, 1847, 1857 and 1866 (Capie 2014).…”
Section: IVmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the following years, a market for dollar denominated bankers' acceptances developed in New York (Ferderer, 2003). In contrast to London where the largest share of bankers' acceptances was issued by small acceptance houses specialized in trade finance, in the United States, the business of accepting bills of exchange was dominated by the country's largest commercial banks (Accominotti, 2018). The US acceptance market also received direct support from monetary authorities as the Federal Reserve Banks bought a very substantial share of acceptances issued by US banks in the 1920s (Eichengreen and Flandreau, 2012).…”
Section: Revival Of Trade Finance In the 1920s And Dual Market Structurementioning
confidence: 99%