Economic History of Developing Regions | 2021

The South African small banks’ crisis of 2002/3

 

Abstract


ABSTRACT Following the collapse of Saambou bank in February 2002, contagion rapidly spread amongst South African small and medium-sized banks. By the end of 2003, half of the country’s banks had deregistered. The paper constructs a unique monthly bank-level data set to show that the banks that failed were those with short-term liabilities from other financial institutions. An initial delay in providing liquidity to solvent banks in distress and raising interest rates may have exacerbated the crisis. The need for prompt, swift action echoes lessons from banking panics throughout history.

Volume 36
Pages 313 - 338
DOI 10.1080/20780389.2021.1943348
Language English
Journal Economic History of Developing Regions

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