74
FREE TO CHOOSE: A Personal Statement
banks were to maintain the prior ratio of reserves to deposits.
That is why a run that results in hoarding of cash by the public
tends to reduce the total money supply. It is also why, if not
stopped promptly, it causes such distress.
Individual banks try
to get cash to meet the demands of their depositors by pressing
their borrowers to repay loans and by refusing to renew loans or
to extend additional ones. Borrowers as a whole have nowhere
to turn, so banks fail and businesses fail.
How can a panic be stopped once it is under way, or better yet,
how can it be prevented from starting? One way to stop a panic
is the method adopted in 1907: a concerted restriction of pay-
ments by the banks. Banks stayed open but they agreed with one
another that they would not pay cash on demand to depositors. In-
stead, they operated through bookkeeping entries.
They honored
checks written by one of their own depositors to another by re-
ducing the deposits recorded on their books to the credit of the
one and increasing the deposits of the other. For checks written
by their depositors to another bank's depositors, or by another
bank's depositors to their depositors, they operated almost as
usual "through the clearinghouse," that is,
by offsetting the
checks on other banks received as deposits against the checks on
their own hank deposited in other banks. The one difference was
that any differences between the amount they owed other banks
and the amount other banks owed them was settled by a promise
to pay instead of, as ordinarily, by the transfer of cash. Banks
paid out some currency, not on demand,
but to regular customers
who needed it for payrolls and similar urgent purposes, and simi-
larly, they received some currency from such regular customers.
Under this system banks might and did still fail because they were
"unsound" banks. They did not fail merely because they could
not convert perfectly sound assets into cash. As time passed,
panic subsided, confidence in banks was restored, and the banks
could resume payment of cash on demand
without starting a new
series of runs. That is a rather drastic way to stop a panic but it
worked.
Another way to stop a panic is to enable sound banks to con-
vert their assets into cash rapidly, not at the expense
of
other
banks but through the availability of additional cash—of an