Volume 11, Issue 1 January 2015

Lessons from the Historical Use of Reserve Requirements in the United States to Promote Bank Liquidity

Abstract

Efforts in the United States to promote bank liquidity through reserve requirements, a minimum ratio of liquid assets relative to liabilities, extend as far back as 1837. Despite such requirements, banking panics and suspensions of deposit convertibility continued to occur. Eventually, policymakers created a central bank to ensure bank liquidity. This paper reviews the historical debates about reserve requirements, supplemented by empirical evidence, to provide insights relevant today about using reserve requirements to regulate liquidity. The insights are related to convincing institutions to use the reserve during stress events and the ways reserve requirements for banks affect interactions with other financial firms before and during a panic.

Authors

  • Mark Carlson

JEL codes

  • G21
  • N21
  • E58
  • B00

Other papers in this issue

Jan in 't Veld and Andrea Pagano and Rafal Raciborski and Marco Ratto and Werner Roeger

Giovanni Di Bartolomeo and Patrizio Tirelli and Nicola Acocella

Simon Dubecq and Benoit Mojon and Xavier Ragot

Tatiana Damjanovic and Vladislav Damjanovic and Charles Nolan

Pierre L. Siklos and Matthias Neuenkirch