Are banking crises free‐market phenomena?

Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 8 (4):591-608 (1994)
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Abstract

The conventional view of banking crises sees them as an inherent problem of fractional?reserve banking systems. According to this view, government regulation in the form of an alert central bank (acting as a ?lender of last resort"), or deposit insurance, or both is needed to keep isolated bank failures from generating systemwide panic. But this view does not mesh with historical experience, which points to government regulation itself as the most likely cause of banking crises.

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Citations of this work

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