Contagion Effects of Three Late Nineteenth Century British Bank Failures
نویسنده
چکیده
British banking during the period 1860 to 1908 experienced a number of bank failures. For example, between 1880 and 1890 there were 29 bank failures. The failure of a bank not only affects the depositors of that bank but also other banks, their shareholders, the monetary system and general economic stability. The main reason for the latter is the loss in public confidence in the banking system which leads to a withdrawal of funds by depositors. In this paper I consider the contagion effects of the failure of Overend Gurney Co. in 1866, City of Glasgow Bank in 1878 and Baring Brothers in 1890. I look at these bank failures for two reasons. First, these failures have been of large and prominent banks which have been argued to lead to banking crises. Second, the failure of these banks played a large part in shaping British banking. For example, the failure of City of Glasgow Bank led to the Companies Act of 1879 which required all banks to have their accounts audited. Unlike previous studies which have considered bank failures, this study uses capital market data in order to assess the impact of these failures on British banks. This study also examines the relationship between the contagion effect and the specific cause of the bank failure.
منابع مشابه
Commentary on " Were Banks Special Intermediaries in Late Nineteenth Century America?
O ne of the hallmarks of Eugene White’s scholarship is his knack for using detailed historical examples to raise large, thought-provoking questions. “Were Banks Special Intermediaries in Late Nineteenth Century America?” is no exception. White combines case studies of two small financial institutions, the Bank of A. Levy and the Emigrant Savings Bank, with other information on nineteenth-centur...
متن کاملContagion Risk in Banking
A controversial issue in the literature on banking regulation is whether there is contagion risk, or not. This paper derives a framework to test for contagion risk and applies it to a data set of monthly bank failures under the US National Banking System from 1880 till 1936. To capture the count nature of bank failure data, an autoregressive Poisson model is used. The empirical results indicate...
متن کاملDepression-Era Bank Failures: The Great Contagion or the Great Shakeout?
D eposit insurance was created, at least in part, to prevent unfounded bank failures caused by contagion. The legislation that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was driven by the widespread bank failures of the Great Depression. In the years immediately before the 1934, when the FDIC began insuring bank deposits, over onethird of all extant banks failed. Many observers ar...
متن کاملDRAFT Modes of Contagion in the Banking Panic of 1930 Erik Heit ield
Throughout the 1930s bank failures were highly clustered in time and space. This suggests that financial linkages between banks and/or systematic shocks that affected many banks simultaneously played important roles in depression era banking panics. This paper uses a Bayesian hazard rate model of bank suspensions with spatial and network effects to explore modes of contagion during the banking ...
متن کاملThe Path to Convergence: Intergenerational Occupational Mobility in Britain and the Us in Three Eras*
Late nineteenth century intergenerational occupational mobility was higher in the US than in Britain. Differences between them in this type of mobility are absent today. Using data on 10,000 US and British father and son pairs followed over two intervals (the 1860s and 1870s, and the 1880s and 1890s), we examine how this convergence occurred. The US remained more mobile then Britain through 190...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2003