- Inter-faculty Studies in Bioinformatics and Systems Biology
- Bachelor's degree, first cycle programme, Computer Science
- Bachelor's degree, first cycle programme, Mathematics
- Master's degree, second cycle programme, Bioinformatics and Systems Biology
- Master's degree, second cycle programme, Computer Science
- Master's degree, second cycle programme, Mathematics
Banking crisis, determinants and consequences. Have they lessons for today 2400-ZEWW492-OG
1. Theory: definitions – financial crisis, banking crisis, currency crisis, models of financial, banking, currency crises, determinants of a banking crisis.
2. Influence of economic crisis on a banking crisis, main types of the banking crises, banking crisis vs. currency crisis, currency crisis vs. banking crisis, costs of crises.
3. Banking system stability as a public wealth, need for protection of activities against crises, security network; hazard identification; symptoms, alert systems, banking institutions evaluation (rating) systems.
4. Historical banking crises – empirical specification: the case of a crash of Italian banking houses in 14-16th centuries – reasons, consequences; collapse of the European finance institutions in 16-17th centuries; bankruptcies of Spain and France – growth of public banking; evolution of a public debt.
5. Empirical specification of banking crises and easy-money speculations in 17-18th centuries; Holland’s banks and the tulip bubble 1637; Britain’s South Bubble Sea, John Law system and the French banking; collapse of the bankers financing speculations.
6. Economic crises and banking crashes in 19th century. Financial crisis and economic crisis, a mechanism of overinvestment; transfers and infections at a multinational scale, panic and bank runs mechanism.
7. Banking crises (by the late 19th century): emergence of legal regulations; British leading financial institutions; the financial responsibility; the Bank of England as a lender of last resort. The conditions of French, German and Polish private banking; creation of the Federal Reserve System. Models of the banking systems: British, Continental (German) - or Rhine and Anglo-Saxon - and the banking system in the US.
9. European banking after the 1st World War; Polish banking and currency crisis (1925): a problem with banking risk, especially the risk of interest rate and exchange rate.
10. The Great Depression: the Wall Street crash and the phenomena of bank bankruptcies – their reasons; spectacular bank runs; attempt to explain their reasons and mechanisms with the use of present day theories.
11. Consequences of the Great Depression: legal regulations, emergence of the regulatory agencies in the US. The Glass Steagall Act and the regulation of a traditional banking activity. Bankesr’s deposits insurance systems; Banking supervisory boards; supervision over capital markets; evolution of the banking regulations in Europe (Germany, England, France).
12. The Great Depression and the Polish banking system; growing position of the state banks; crises of the private banking sector.
13. Banking crises in the 1980s. and 1990s. in the stable economies: Scandinavian countries, USA (crash of individual banks in the 1980s. and crash of LTCM in 1998), Great Britain (1990-91, 1995), Japan (1994-1995, 1997). Crisis management and restoration of banking systems.
14. Financial crises in the 1990s. in the emerging economies: specificity of crises in Asia; structural weakness of the Asian economies; significance of the behavioral factors: panic, herd effect; restoration programs, costs, case study – Crisis in Indonesia and South Korea.
Type of course
Course coordinators
Learning outcomes
Knowledge:
After completing the course, the student: knows the theories and models explaining the reasons and mechanism of financial, banking and currency crises; understands the specifics of the financial and banking crises and their importance to the process of changes in the banking systems and to their legislative-institutional environment in the historical perspective; is able to explain the mechanism of crises transfer among the different sectors of the economy at the domestic and international scale in the historical depiction; is able to explain the specifics of the risk of the banking activity in the consecutive historical periods; knows the processes and reasons affecting the bank crashes in different historical periods.
Competences:
After completing the course, the student is able to: perform an analysis of the financial, banking and currency crises from the past, using the up to date (present day) categories and economic instruments; explain an influence of a historical context on the distinctness in the course of the financial crises; associate (put together) the role in which both behavioral and economic factors may trigger the banking crises; explain the mechanism of infecting and transferring the crises among the sectors of economy and the financial institutions; critically evaluate the methods of the crisis management and the costs of the security network: construction: costs of system stability vs. moral hazard.
Social competences:
A student should perceive that the shape of the banking systems security network results as a product of historical experience in the financial crises. A student should be able to interpret and formulate his own conclusions, based on critical analysis of sources, views of different
authors, premises and arguemnts.
SU05, SU06, SK01, SK03, SU04, SU03, SU02, SU01, SW03, SW02, SW01, SW04, SW05, SK02, SK04
Assessment criteria
1. Written paper: size 18000 – 27000 marks, workshop requirement equal to scientific paper; oral presentation, the paper may be prepared individually or in a small group
2. Activity in discussions on topics mentioned in the presented papers
3. Presense in class, 2 absences are allowed
Bibliography
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Bordo M. D., The Lender of Last Resort: Alternative Views and Historical Experience, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, “Economic Review”, Jan./Feb.1990. http://richmondfed.org.publications/research.
Chancellor E., Historia spekulacji finansowych, Warszawa 2001
Capiga M., Ryzyko w działalności banku, [w:] Działanie banków uniwersalnych. Wybrane problemy, Wyd. AE Katowice, 2000,
Calomiris C., Gorton G., The Origins of Banking Panic: Models, Facts and Bank Regulation, University of Chicago Press, Chicago 1991
Cameron R. (red.) Banking and Economics Development. Some Lessons from History, Oxford 1972
Cameron R., Bovkin V. I.(red.), International Banking 1870-1914, New York 1991
Capie F. H. (red.), History of Banking 1650-1850, London 1993
Cull R., Senbel L., Sorge M., Deposit Insurance and Bank Intermediation in the Long Run, BIS Working Papers, July 2004, No 156
Gavin M., Hausmann R., The Roots of Banking Crises: The Macroeconomic Context, Inter-American Development Bank, Jan. 1998
Hibbert C., Medyceusze. Wzlot i upadek, Łódź 1992
Iwanicz - Drozdowska M., Determinanty bezpieczeństwa banków w świetle analizy wybranych kryzysów bankowych, SGH Warszawa 2000
Iwanicz-Drozdowska M. (red.), Kryzysy bankowe. Przyczyny i rozwiązania, PWE Warszawa 2002
Iwanicz-Drozdowska M., Nowak A., Ryzyko bankowe, SGH Warszawa 2002
Kahn C., Santos J., Allocating bank regulatory powers: lender of last resort, deposit insurance and supervision, BIS Working Papers, Aug. 2001, No. 102
Kaminsky G., Currency and Banking Crises: The Early Warning of Distress, IMF Institute, Dec. 1999
Kaminsky G., The Twin Crisis: The Causes of Banking and Balance of Payments Problems, International Finance Discussion Papers, March 1996, No. 544
Kennedy S., The Banking Crisis of 1933, Lexington 1973
Kindleberger Ch. P., Szaleństwo, panika, krach. Historia kryzysów finansowych, Warszawa 1999
Krugman P., Currency Crises, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London 2000
Lottman H. R., Powrót Rotschildów, Dzieje wielkiej dynastii bankierskiej w ciągu dwóch burzliwych stuleci, Warszawa 1998
Małecki W., Sławiński A., Piasecki R., Żuławska U., Kryzysy walutowe, Warszawa 2001
Morawski W., Kronika kryzysów gospodarczych, TRIO, Warszawa 2003
Morawski W., Zarys powszechnej historii pieniądza, bankowości i kredytu, TRIO, Warszawa 2002
Morawski W., Bankowość prywatna w II Rzeczypospolitej, SGH Warszawa 1996
Morawski M., Historyczne źródła współczesnych systemów bankowych, Zeszyty Naukowe WSIiZ, Rzeszów 1998, nr 1
Ogger G., Fuggerowie, Warszawa 1998
Oręziak L., System bankowy Stanów Zjednoczonych – dotychczasowy rozwój i kierunki zmian „Bank i Kredyt” 2000, nr 4 (bankowe ABC)
Oręziak L., Japoński system bankowy, [w:] Bankowość na świecie i w Polsce. Stan obecny i tendencje rozwojowe, red. L. Oręziak, B. Pietrzak, Warszawa 2000
Sławiński A., Przyczyny i następstwa kryzysu walutowego, PWN Warszawa 2001.
Solarz J. K., Ewolucja japońskiego systemu bankowego i polityki monetarnej, Warszawa 1990
Solarz J. K., Rozwój systemów bankowych, Warszawa 1996
Szczepańska O., Podstawowe przesłanki, założenia i struktura sieci bezpieczeństwa finansowego w świetle teorii i doświadczeń międzynarodowych, “Bezpieczny Bank” 2005, nr 1,
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Szczepańska O., Sotomska-Krzysztofik P., Pawliszyn M., Banki centralne wobec kryzysów w systemie bankowym, „Materiały i Studia” NBP, 2004, z. 179, s. 6 i nast.
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Żywiecka H., Przyczyny i mechanizmy kryzysów walutowych ze szczególnym uwzględnieniem znaczenia międzynarodowych przepływów kapitału, „Materiały i Studia” NBP 2002, z. 145.
Additional information
Information on level of this course, year of study and semester when the course unit is delivered, types and amount of class hours - can be found in course structure diagrams of apropriate study programmes. This course is related to the following study programmes:
- Inter-faculty Studies in Bioinformatics and Systems Biology
- Bachelor's degree, first cycle programme, Computer Science
- Bachelor's degree, first cycle programme, Mathematics
- Master's degree, second cycle programme, Bioinformatics and Systems Biology
- Master's degree, second cycle programme, Computer Science
- Master's degree, second cycle programme, Mathematics
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: