Preventing bank runs
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose an indirect bank run prevention mechanism that allows depositors to communicate their beliefs, not just their types, and incentivizes them to communicate rumors of an impending bank run, and threatens to suspend payments conditional on what is revealed in these communications.
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Abstract: The work of Diamond and Dybvig, 1983 is commonly understood as a theory of bank runs driven by self-fulfilling prophecies. Their contribution may alternatively be interpreted as a theory for preventing these bank runs. Absent aggregate risk over liquidity demand, they show that a simple scheme that suspends withdrawls when a target level of bank reserves is reached implements the efficient allocation as the unique equilibrium. Uniqueness implies that there cannot be a bank-run equilibrium. Unfortunately, this scheme cannot implement the efficient allocation when there is aggregate uncertainty over every possible liquidity demand because any realization of liquidity demand may, in this case, be determined by fundamentals instead of psychology. When there is aggregate risk, Peck and Shell, 2003 demonstrate that the constrained efficient allocation can be implemented by a direct mechanism as an equilibrium. They show that the same mechanism can also implement a bank-run equilibrium, which suggests that Diamond and Dybvig, 1983 can be understood as a theory of bank runs. The use of direct mechanisms, however, imposes a severe restriction on communications. We propose an indirect mechanism that (i) permits depositors to communicate their beliefs, not just their types, (ii) incentivizes depositors to communicate “rumors” of an impending bank run, and (iii) threatens to suspend payments conditional on what is revealed in these communications. We demonstrate that if commitment is possible, then under some weak parameter restrictions our indirect mechanism uniquely implements an allocation that can be made arbitrarily close to the the constrained efficient allocation as an equilibrium. In other words, our mechanism prevents bank runs.
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References
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TL;DR: The authors showed that bank deposit contracts can provide allocations superior to those of exchange markets, offering an explanation of how banks subject to runs can attract deposits, and showed that there are circumstances when government provision of deposit insurance can produce superior contracts.
A Model of Reserves, Bank Runs, and Deposit Insurance
John B. Bryant,John B. Bryant +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a model is presented in which demand deposits backed by fractional currency reserves and public insurance can be beneficial, and the case for demand deposits, reserves, and deposit insurance rests on costs of illiquidity and incomplete information.
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Clearinghouses and the Origin of Central Banking in the United States
TL;DR: In this article, the New York City Clearinghouse Association (NYCHA) response to banking panics is studied. And the authors suggest some working hypotheses about banking industry products and structure and focus on the role of the clearinghouse, and their implications for assessing the efficiency and uniqueness of contractual arrangements in banking.
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Equilibrium Bank Runs
James Peck,Karl Shell +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze a banking system in which the class of feasible deposit contracts, or mechanisms, is broad, and they show, by examples, that under the so-called "optimal contract," the postdeposit game can have a run equilibrium.
Bank Runs and Institutions: The Perils of Intervention
Huberto M. Ennis,Todd Keister +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors study ex-post efficient policy responses to a run on the banking system and the ex ante incentives these responses create, and they show that the efficient response is typically not to freeze all remaining deposits, since doing so imposes heavy costs on some individuals.