Harvests and Financial Crises in Gold Standard America
Christopher Hanes and
Paul Rhode
The Journal of Economic History, 2013, vol. 73, issue 1, 201-246
Abstract:
Most American financial crises of the postbellum gold standard era were caused by fluctuations in the cotton harvest due to exogenous factors such as weather. The transmission channel ran through export revenues and financial markets under the pre-1914 monetary regime. A poor cotton harvest depressed export revenues and reduced international demand for American assets, which depressed American stock prices, drained deposits from money center banks and precipitated a business cycle downturn—conditions that bred financial crises. The crises caused by cotton harvests could have been prevented by an American central bank, even under gold standard constraints.
Date: 2013
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Working Paper: Harvests and Financial Crises in Gold-Standard America (2012) 
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