Exogenous Shocks, Deposit Runs and Bank Soundness : A Macroeconomic Framework

In a model where all banks are initially solvent, an exogenous shock affects confidence, causing a flight from deposits into domestic and foreign currency. Real interest rates increase unexpectedly, affecting firms and raising the share of the banks' nonperforming assets. This increase causes genuine solvency problems and accelerates the bank run. Policy simulations show that compensatory monetary policy (increasing currency supply when deposits fall) mitigates the bank run but causes inflation and external imbalances. Combining compensatory monetary policy with tight fiscal policies also slows the bank run and mitigates insolvency, but at a lower macroeconomic cost. A devaluation is shown to have little positive impact.
Publication date: July 1997
ISBN: 9781451951738
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Banks and Banking , Banks and Banking , Inflation , Inflation , banking , banking system , real interest rate , inflation

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