One of the concerns in the debate on central bank digital currency is whether the ability for depositors to hold an account at the central bank could trigger a run on the banking system..look back to the French Great Depression of 1930-1931, when savers had a safe alternative to banks.. .
In the ongoing
debate on the design of central bank digital currency (CBDC), several
authors have expressed important concerns about financial stability
risk. As CBDC would provide depositors with an account at the central
bank, they may trigger a run on the banking system. In case of systemic
uncertainty about banks, holding risk-free CBDC could indeed become more
attractive than bank deposits (Allen et al. 2020, Bindseil and Panetta
2020, Fernández-Villaverde et al. 2020, Juks 2018, Mersch 2018). These
concerns have inspired proposals for a special design of CBDC (Bindseil
and Panetta 2020) and are considered in official reports of central
banks about the future of money (BIS et al. 2020, ECB 2020).
Nonetheless, no empirical evidence exists to date to inform such a
claim. Can central bank digital currencies cause bank runs?
Flight-to-safety and the French banking crises of 1930-1931
Our research
confirms empirically the intuition that the existence of safer deposits
than bank deposits can trigger bank runs (Monnet et al. 2021). We
examine the causal effect of bank runs on real economic activity during
the French Great Depression (1930-1931). Our identification strategy
exploits a key and original feature of this crisis (and of the French
interwar banking system more generally) – namely, the existence of safe
alternatives to banks and their heterogeneous establishment across the
country – that generated an exogenous variation in the probability of
bank runs.
Starting early
November 1930, French depositors – households and firms – suddenly
withdrew their funds from commercial banks all across the country
(Baubeau et al. 2021, Monnet et al. 2021). French banks were still
unregulated at that time (the first banking laws were passed in 1941).
Depositors transferred the funds withdrawn from banks to savings
institutions (Caisses d’épargne ordinaires, or CEOs). Contrary
to banks, CEOs were regulated and they benefited from the guarantee of
the government, but they were not allowed to lend nor to provide payment
services.
We hypothesise that
the pre-crisis density of CEO accounts at the local level increased the
probability of bank runs, in a way that was independent of the health of
local banks. Because CEO deposits were as liquid as bank deposits,
people who already had a CEO account had incentives to withdraw their
deposits from banks as soon as uncertainty emerged at the national
level.
The pre-crisis
density of savings institutions (measured by the number of CEO accounts
per capita) was heterogeneous across departments and randomly
distributed for historical reasons unrelated to local economic
performances and bank characteristics. CEOs were not allowed to lend
(they could only hold government securities), so other sources of
borrowing were cut at the local level. Our study is conducted at the
departmental level (France was divided into 90 departments), with yearly
data. Banking activity is measured by the number of bank branches (the
only statistics on banks available at the local level over this period).
We have reconstructed a new measure of real GDP for the French
departments in the interwar period, based on comprehensive tax data.
The causes and effects of bank runs
The right-hand panel
in Figure 1 shows the correlation between the pre-crisis density of
savings institutions, measured by the number of CEO accounts per capita
in 1924, and the growth rate of bank branches between 1929 and 1932. The
strong negative relationship means that more CEO-dense departments were
those that witnessed a sharper decline in banking activity. Departments
with fewer CEO accounts per capita experienced a smaller decline, or
even an increase, in bank branches.
This dynamic was not
the continuation of a pre-trend. The left-hand panel in Figure 1 shows
no correlation between pre-crisis CEO density (in 1924) and the growth
rate of bank branches before the crisis, between 1925 and 1928. CEOs and
banks were not substitutes but complement before the crisis. When the
panics started, however, bank runs spread across the country, and
deposits in CEOs and banks became negatively correlated.
Figure 1 Number
of accounts per capita in CEO pre-crisis (1924) vs growth rate of bank
branches between 1925 and 1928: Before the crisis (left) and the crisis
years of 1929–1932 (right)
Source: Monnet et al. (2021).
We then use the
pre-crisis density of the CEOs to instrument the growth rate of bank
branches during the crisis. Using this method, we find a strong effect
of a decline in banking activity on GDP. A 1% decrease in bank branches
caused a drop in income by about 1% per year between 1929 and 1932. To
give an order of magnitude, a 1% annual decrease in bank branches was
associated with a 2% decrease in bank credit at the bank level (using
national data). A back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that our
identified causal effect of bank runs may explain one-third of the drop
in real GDP in 1930-1931.
Consequences for the design of CBDC
Besides studying the
real effects of bank runs, our paper shows how competition between
unregulated and safer financial institutions affects financial
stability. This holds important lessons for current banking regulation
and the debate on digital central bank currency. Our results confirm
empirically that the existence of safe deposits other than banks can
play a substantial role in triggering bank runs (Bindseil and Panetta
2020, Fernández-Villaverde et al. 2020). This risk is not just a
theoretical curiosity.
Moreover, our study
provides two specific insights for the design of CBDC. In particular, we
can provide evidence on two elements of the current discussion:
ceilings on safe deposits and interest rates.
On the one hand, we
show that ceilings applied to safe deposit accounts greatly matter
during a crisis. In March 1931 – in the midst of the crisis – the French
Parliament raised the maximum amount that depositors could deposit in
their CEO accounts from 12,000 to 20,000 francs for individuals and
50,000 to 100,000 for firms. This decision was motivated by political
pressure arguing that deposits with CEOs were the safest way to protect
depositors during the crisis. According to several contemporary
observers, the increase in the CEO deposits ceiling was a fatal blow
that worsened the severity of the second wave of banking panic at the
end of 1931.
On the other hand,
the interest rate differential between safe institutions and banks did
not matter in the pre-crisis period, but certainly contributed to
exacerbating the flight-to-safety when the bank runs started. Figure 2
shows that, from 1927 through 1932, interest rates paid on CEO deposits,
regulated by the government, were regularly higher than interest rates
paid by commercial banks to their depositors. Depositors accepted a
lower interest rate on their bank deposits in normal times because banks
provided additional services (credit relationship, means of payment,
investment advice, and management of securities portfolios often for
free), although CEO deposits were also liquid. They rushed on safe
savings accounts only during the crisis. In other words, the spread
between interest rates has very different behavioral consequences during
a systemic crisis, because the risk is perceived differently. Our
historical study thus suggests that it would be possible for CBDC to pay
higher interest rates on deposits in normal times, as long as there is a
deposit ceiling that also prevents runs in uncertain times...
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