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Liquidity provision during the crisis of 1914: Private and public sources
Affiliation:1. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Ohio, United States;2. Oberlin College, Ohio, United States;1. Department of International Business Studies, National Chi Nan University, Nantou County, Taiwan, ROC;2. National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, ROC;1. Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Sonnemannstraße 9-11, D-60314 Frankfurt a.M., Germany;2. European Central Bank, Neue Mainzer Strasse 32-35, D-60311 Frankfurt a.M., Germany
Abstract:Caught between the end of the National Banking Era and the beginning of the Federal Reserve System, the crisis of 1914 provides an example of a banking panic avoided. We investigate how this outcome was achieved by examining data on the issues of Aldrich-Vreeland emergency currency and clearing house loan certificates to New York City institutions that identify the borrower and the quantity requested for each type of temporary liquidity measure. The extensive provision of temporary credit to a wide array of financial intermediaries was, in our opinion, essential to the successful alleviation of financial distress in 1914. Empirical results indicate an important role for clearing house loan certificates that is distinct from the influence of Aldrich-Vreeland emergency currency issues.
Keywords:Liquidity provision  Lender of last resort  Closure of stock exchange  Financial crisis  Clearing houses  Aldrich-Vreeland emergency currency
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