The Western countries have sanctioned Russia in a way not applied to any globally integrated major power since 1914. There are lessons to be learned from the 1914 systemic crisis and that high inflation and government debt will make it difficult to contain a crisis today if one emerges. 
      
    
    
      Russia’s invasion of
 Ukraine and the sanctions applied to it by the Western world sharply 
raises systemic financial risk, and we have to look back to the build-up
 to WWI to find a precedent.
Systemic risk does 
not capture the most likely, or even the plausible. Instead, a systemic 
crisis is an unlikely and highly destructive event where the forces of 
instability come together to create a major financial crisis – one whose
 cost is a meaningful fraction of GDP.
Historical background
The 1914 systemic 
crisis was triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of
 Austria on 28 June 1914, amid raised expectations of an impending war. 
This anticipation created worries that financial institutions would have 
trouble getting cross-border loans repaid — after all, if two countries 
are at war, enforcing contracts across borders is difficult. 
The specific crisis 
trigger was that major trading nations Austria, Germany (Hungerland et 
al. 2021), and France, intent on protecting their own financial markets,
 prohibited payments to foreign names. The cessation of cross-border 
loan payments and clearing created immense difficulties for banks with 
clients in those countries, rapidly spreading to all banks. As a result,
 a typical systemic risk feedback loop emerged, with everybody hoarding 
liquidity and not providing credit, while financial institutions and 
real economy firms faced the threat of bankruptcies. Moreover, further 
sanctions exacerbated the crisis once the war started, with the central 
powers particularly suffering from blockades (Brunnermeier et al. 2018, 
Roberts 2013). 
The policy remedy 
was familiar: massive creation of liquidity (Bagehot 1876). Germany was 
prepared, having large stocks of high-quality paper and ink ready for 
printing money. Britain did not, and the newly printed pounds were 
printed with low-quality ink on cheap paper, causing widespread 
derision. The resulting quantitative easing was immense and succeeded in
 containing the liquidity crisis. However, that wasn’t sufficient, and 
many governments suspended requirements for making most private loan 
payments. In addition, the governments of Britain and the US closed the 
stock exchanges for half a year, as they were then the primary trading 
venue for bonds. A further important lesson is that while the Bank of 
England was the putative entity fighting a crisis, the severity was such
 that the Treasury took the lead and made all the crucial decisions and 
printed all the pound notes. 
1914 was the last 
global systemic crisis triggered by economic sanctions and war. Then, as
 now, the financial system was globally integrated, so the resulting 
crisis has much to teach today’s policymakers.
War, sanctions, and systemic risk
There are 
significant differences between 1914 and 2022. Unlike in 1914, today's 
financial system is flush with liquidity due to the governments' 
response to Covid, and the belligerents today account for a smaller 
fraction of global trade, although Western European countries are more 
dependent on that trade than they were in 1914.
Even after WWI 
started, remittance between the Central Powers and the Allies continued 
via neutral countries – notably, Switzerland. Today, there are already 
signs that sanctions will assist the rise of new intermediaries, China, 
and cryptocurrency exchanges. In doing so, not only will they erode the 
power of the West over the global financial architecture, but they will 
also increase the system's diversity, which would reduce global systemic
 risk in the long term. 
Systemic crises 
involve the worst possible outcomes, not the likely ones. At the heart 
of scenarios under which one could develop, the worst is a consequence 
of the dreaded government-bank doom loop. 
As in 1914, the most
 apparent financial risks are to the European banks directly exposed to 
belligerent creditors. Fortunately, these do not appear to pose an 
immediate systemic concern. Capital cushions appear ample. Instead, we 
surmise that the initial systemic risk will emerge elsewhere. The most 
immediate threat is that Russia may retaliate by cutting off gas exports
 to Europe, which would trigger an immediate economic crisis in 
energy-dependent economies, particularly Germany.
Even if that does 
not come to pass, higher commodity prices and losses faced by those 
exposed to Russia create significant problems for financial and 
non-financial firms, and contribute to the considerable political 
instability. 
The initial impact 
will be strongest felt by Germany and those countries with the strongest
 energy dependence on Russia, but every European country will be 
affected. 
We expect calls for 
the ECB  to help European countries to overcome the crisis. However, that
 won't be easy. Sharply rising commodity prices and limited supply 
immediately curtail economic activity. If the ECB  attempts to monetise 
the shortfall in an environment of a contracting economy, the 
consequence is likely sharply increased inflation far beyond the current
 7%. 
Interest rates 
across the maturity structure will then sharply rise, causing problems 
for those most indebted European states with the shortest maturities, 
and hence the heaviest refinancing need. Moreover, as European banks 
hold a relatively large portion of sovereign debt, their balance sheets 
will consequently come under increasing strain, curtailing lending and 
setting the bank-government doom loop in motion.
One way to see how 
financial markets perceive the severity of the current situation is by 
looking at how they price insurance (options) against significant 
long-term losses on the market value of firms. We use data from such 
long-term and deep ‘out of the money’ options to construct what we term 
‘market fear’. Technically, the quantiles associated with the 10% 
risk-neutral probabilities were obtained from one and ten-year options, 
using data obtained from IHS Markit (Bevilacqua et al. 2021)
Figure 1 shows 
market fear for the Standard & Poor'sP500, DAX index, and Deutsche 
Bank on the worst day of the Covid crisis on March 2020, 1 January 2022,
 and 8 March 2022. 
At the one-year 
horizon, fear in S&P 500 is similar to the DAX index. For all three 
assets, the one-year fear was much higher in March 2020 than it is now. 
However, the picture is different at the one-decade horizon. The S&P
 500 long-term fear appears unaffected by the war, while fears have 
significantly increased in both DAX and Deutsche Bank. 
The charts indicate 
that the financial market expects German financial institutions and its 
broader economy to significantly suffer over the coming decade. 
Figure 1 One-year and one-decade market fear

Policy challenges
Such a complex 
crisis scenario in a general environment of high and rising inflation is
 particularly challenging for the central banks as stewards of both the 
currency and macroprudential policy. The macroprudential policy response
 calls for vast injections of liquidity. However, central banks, with 
their eye on inflation approaching 10%, will be reticent to create more 
liquidity via blunt tools such as QE and low interest rates. They could,
 of course, provide instead large-scale collateralised lending, which in
 turn raises concerns about the role of private sector lending 
institutions.
Central banks have 
had the benefit of macroprudential policy and monetary policy pulling in
 the same direction over the past decade and half, but no more. Monetary
 policy today calls for less liquidity and will oppose any emerging 
macro requirement for more liquidity. Market participants know this, so a
 relatively minor disruption to liquidity could lead to a 
self-fulfilling prophecy. Having done whatever it took over the past 
decade and a half, central banks have left themselves little ammunition 
to fight the consequences of the Ukraine war and sanctions. 
If the crisis 
worsens, governments will be called on to support those entities 
suffering most from the war and the sanctions. They are in a poor 
position to do so, with sovereign debt at record peacetime levels, 
revenues likely to fall, and inflation high and rising. If the crisis 
turns especially severe, governments will have no choice but to monetise
 the interventions, further fuelling inflation. 
The consequence 
could be increasing European fragmentation, as some states have strong 
economies and a good fiscal position and hence find it much easier to 
weather the crisis, while the most indebted European economies face more
 serious challenges. 
Conclusion  
The severe systemic 
crisis in 1914 provides a cautionary lesson for policymakers reacting to
 Russia’s invasion of Ukraine today. In 1914, countries intent on 
protecting their own financial systems and punishing their enemies 
closed off most cross-border provision of financial services, with the 
immediate consequence of a systemic crisis.
The consequences of 
Western sanctions against Russia are not of the same magnitude, and a 
systemic crisis remains unlikely. That changes if Russia opts to 
retaliate by cutting off gas supplies to Europe, and even if it does 
not, the longer the war lasts and the more biting the sanctions become, 
the worse the financial system and the real economy will be affected. 
Regulators have 150 
years of experience in dealing with financial crises, but their 
preferred tool – liquidity – is difficult to wield due to inflation and 
weak fiscal positions. We are now living with the consequences of 
central banks’ enthusiasm for liquidity creation in the years after 
2008, especially 2020. This has served well but now leaves us in a poor 
place for responding the current crisis, particularly given its focus in
 the real rather than financial economy.
Jon Danielsson, Charles Goodhart, Robert Macrae 
Vox
      
      
      
      
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