When:
Friday, October 27, 2023
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM CT
Where: Kellogg Global Hub, 3301, 2211 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208 map it
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Contact:
Economics
(847) 467-7263
Group: Department of Economics: Economic History Lunch Seminar
Category: Academic
Speaker: Kilian Rieder (European Central Bank)
Title: Taming Credit Booms: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Federal Reserve Policies in 1920-21
Abstract: How should policy-makers tame excessive credit growth? I exploit a single natural experiment to estimate the comparative causal effects of different financial stability policies on bank-level credit. In 1920, four Federal Reserve Banks hiked their interest rate indiscriminately to safeguard financial stability. Another four Reserve Banks employed targeted rate action aimed at over-leveraged banks instead. The remaining Federal Reserve districts did not take any measures. For identification, I draw on geographic border discontinuities across districts with different policy choices. In direct horse races, the uniform rate hike dampened the boom more successfully than targeted policies. Yet, contemporary local shocks also interacted with financial stability interventions to induce substantial heterogeneity in credit supply responses across the United States.