Article ID: CBB619097743

Flight‐to‐safety and the credit crunch: A new history of the banking crises in France during the Great Depression (2021)

unapi

Despite France's importance in the interwar world economy, the scale of the French banking crises of 1930–1 and their consequences have never been fully assessed quantitatively. The lack of banking regulation severely limited the availability of balance sheet data. Using a new dataset of individual balance sheets from more than 300 banks, this article shows that the crises were much more severe than previously thought, although they did not affect the main commercial banks. By reconstructing financial flows, this study shows that the fall in bank credit was mostly driven by a flight-to-safety by deposits, from banks to savings institutions and the central bank. The decrease in bank deposits due to bank runs was offset by an increase in deposits with savings institutions, with the central bank, and in cash hoarding, whereas the decrease in bank credit was not offset by an increase in loans from non-bank financial institutions. In line with the gold standard mentality, cash deposited with savings institutions and the central bank was used to decrease marketable public debt and increase gold reserves, rather than pursuing countercyclical policies. Despite massive capital inflows and rising aggregate money supply, France suffered from a severe, persistent credit crunch.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB619097743/

Similar Citations

Article Mircea Raianu; (Autumn 2020)
Trade, Finance, and Industry in the Development of Indian Capitalism: The Case of Tata (/isis/citation/CBB633976079/)

Book Philip T. Hoffman; Gilles Postel-Vinay; Jean-Laurent Rosenthal; (2019)
Dark Matter Credit: The Development of Peer-to-Peer Lending and Banking in France (/isis/citation/CBB607832878/)

Article Nicole Mottier; (2019)
The Origins of Mexico's Banco Nacional de Crédito Ejidal, in Thought and Practice (/isis/citation/CBB285024227/)

Book Francesca Trivellato; (2019)
The Promise and Peril of Credit (/isis/citation/CBB648913997/)

Book Christopher Kobrak; Joe Martin; (2018)
From Wall Street to Bay Street: The Origins and Evolution of American and Canadian Finance (/isis/citation/CBB898988875/)

Book Youssef Cassis; Giuseppe Telesca; (2018)
Financial Elites and European Banking: Historical Perspectives. (/isis/citation/CBB066634132/)

Book James, Harold; (2020)
Making a modern central bank :the Bank of England 1979-2003 (/isis/citation/CBB395981566/)

Article Anne Fleming; (Winter 2019)
Anti-Competition Regulation (/isis/citation/CBB447297303/)

Book Shennette Garrett-Scott; (2019)
Banking on Freedom: Black Women in U.S. Finance before the New Deal (/isis/citation/CBB092555130/)

Book Ranald C. Michie; (2016)
British Banking: Continuity and Change from 1694 to the Present (/isis/citation/CBB394224431/)

Article Jim Bolton; Francesco Guidi-Bruscoli; (2021)
‘Your flexible friend’: the bill of exchange in theory and practice in the fifteenth century† (/isis/citation/CBB630033652/)

Article Carmona, Juan; Simpson, James; (2012)
Explaining Contract Choice: Vertical Coordination, Sharecropping, and Wine in Europe, 1850---1950 (/isis/citation/CBB001320068/)

Book Peter J. Kuznick; (2019)
Beyond the Laboratory: Scientists as Political Activists in 1930s America (/isis/citation/CBB505628630/)

Book Backhouse, Roger E.; (2000)
Early Histories of Economic Thought 1824-1914 (/isis/citation/CBB000101659/)

Book Topalov, Christian; (1999)
La nébuleuse réformatrice et ses réseaux en France, 1880-1914. (/isis/citation/CBB000110072/)

Article James R. Munson; (2016)
The ‘interests of commerce’: business failure in the Commercial Code Debates, 1801–07 (/isis/citation/CBB695602096/)

Authors & Contributors
Guidi-Bruscoli, Francesco
James, Harold
Bolton, Jim
Telesca, Giuseppe
Cassis, Youssef
Fleming, Anne
Concepts
Banks and banking
Finance
Business history
Economics
Credit
Economic history
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
21st century
18th century
20th century, late
Places
France
United States
Europe
Great Britain
Germany
England
Institutions
Bank of England
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment