Correspondent Clearing and the Banking Panics of the Great Depression

44 Pages Posted: 6 Dec 2006 Last revised: 1 Oct 2022

See all articles by Gary Richardson

Gary Richardson

University of California at Irvine; National Bureau of Economic Research

Date Written: December 2006

Abstract

Between the founding of the Federal Reserve System in 1913 and the depression of the 1930s, three check-clearing systems operated in the United States. The Federal Reserve cleared checks for members of the system. Clearing houses cleared checks for members of their organizations. Correspondents cleared checks for all other institutions. The correspondent-clearing system was vulnerable to counter-party cascades, particularly because accounting conventions overstated reserves available to individual institutions and the system as a whole. In November 1930, a correspondent system in the center of the United States collapsed, causing the closure of more than one hundred institutions. Bank runs radiated from the locus of events, and additional correspondent networks succumbed to the situation. For the remainder of the contraction, banks that relied upon correspondents to clear checks failed at higher rates than other banks. In sum, weaknesses within a check-clearing system played a hitherto unrecognized role in the banking crises of the Great Depression.

Suggested Citation

Richardson, Gary, Correspondent Clearing and the Banking Panics of the Great Depression (December 2006). NBER Working Paper No. w12716, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=948178

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