Lessons from Financial Crises: The Role of Clearinghouses |
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Authors: | Randall S. Kroszner |
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Affiliation: | (1) Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago, and NBER, USA |
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Abstract: | This article investigates the historical development of clearinghouses and their ability to deal with financial crises. The article first reviews the role of bank clearinghouses in the Panic of 1907, the final crisis of the National Banking Era that led to the founding of the Federal Reserve, and examines how the clearinghouses responded by issuing transactions media, despite legal obstacles, and providing coinsurance among the members. The article then traces the late nineteenth and twentieth century evolution of clearinghouses at futures exchanges to understand how they promote stability and withstand crises by mutualizing risks among members. The key feature of both bank and futures clearinghouses is the effective integration of the members during times of distress, illustrating how the private markets develop institutions and contracts to manage risk and respond to financial crises. |
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Keywords: | clearinghouses mutualization of risk self regulation payments systems |
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