To test a model of contagion--where individuals hear some bad news and communicate it to their acquaintances, who then pass it on, leading to a market panic--requires a knowledge of the information networks of participants, something hitherto unavailable. For two panics in the 1850s this paper examines the behavior of Irish depositors in a New York bank. As recent immigrants, their social network was determined largely by their place of origin in Ireland, and where they lived in New York. During both panics this social network turns out to be the prime determinant of behavior.2014-09-18 JG: Record reinstated from backup after damaged text_valu
We explain the origins of the Panic of 1857, examine its spread, and compare state banking systems's...
Policy makers aim to avoid banking crises, and although they can to some extent control domestic con...
We study how the phenomenon of contagion can take place in the network of the world’s stock exchange...
To test a model of contagion-where individuals hear some bad news and communicate it to their acquai...
Using records of individual depositors’ accounts, this article provides a detailed microeconomic ana...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:9350.10306(99/19) / BLDSC - British L...
This deposit provides the data for replicating the figures and table in the paper "How Contagious wa...
The 2007 subprime crisis in the U.S. triggered a succession of financial crises around the globe, re...
One of the most peculiar economic phenomena currently known is contagion. Contagion, in its most bas...
There is a wide range of opinion regarding historical and theoretical causes of bank panics and fina...
Financial contagion is modeled as an equilibrium phenomenon in a dynamic setting with incomplete inf...
This paper incorporates costly voluntary acquisition of information à la Nikitin and Smith (2007) [N...
We investigate the phenomenon of contagion with a special focus on the recent financial crisis, dist...
Financial contagion is modeled as an equilibrium phenomenon in a dynamic setting with incomplete inf...
There are two competing theories explaining bank panics. One argues that panics are driven by real s...
We explain the origins of the Panic of 1857, examine its spread, and compare state banking systems's...
Policy makers aim to avoid banking crises, and although they can to some extent control domestic con...
We study how the phenomenon of contagion can take place in the network of the world’s stock exchange...
To test a model of contagion-where individuals hear some bad news and communicate it to their acquai...
Using records of individual depositors’ accounts, this article provides a detailed microeconomic ana...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:9350.10306(99/19) / BLDSC - British L...
This deposit provides the data for replicating the figures and table in the paper "How Contagious wa...
The 2007 subprime crisis in the U.S. triggered a succession of financial crises around the globe, re...
One of the most peculiar economic phenomena currently known is contagion. Contagion, in its most bas...
There is a wide range of opinion regarding historical and theoretical causes of bank panics and fina...
Financial contagion is modeled as an equilibrium phenomenon in a dynamic setting with incomplete inf...
This paper incorporates costly voluntary acquisition of information à la Nikitin and Smith (2007) [N...
We investigate the phenomenon of contagion with a special focus on the recent financial crisis, dist...
Financial contagion is modeled as an equilibrium phenomenon in a dynamic setting with incomplete inf...
There are two competing theories explaining bank panics. One argues that panics are driven by real s...
We explain the origins of the Panic of 1857, examine its spread, and compare state banking systems's...
Policy makers aim to avoid banking crises, and although they can to some extent control domestic con...
We study how the phenomenon of contagion can take place in the network of the world’s stock exchange...