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Aurélien Espic

Doctorant Banque de France

Espic
Statut
Doctorant en thèse d'exercice
Doctorat
Essays on financial stability and non-financial firms
Depuis 2023, sous la direction de Céline Poilly
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Résumé In the follow-up to the 1926 political and monetary crisis in France, a new government led by Raymond Poincaré attempted to restore monetary stability by restructuring public debt. A sinking fund was missioned to withdraw short-term public bills from money markets. This policy disorganized the largest Parisian banks of the time, as they relied on these bills to manage their liquidity. Without developed domestic money markets, no other asset could absorb the excess liquidity freed by the withdrawal of these bills, and these leading banks faced a low-rate environment. In search of yield, they expanded their activities abroad a few months before the 1929 crash. These findings renew our understanding of the expansion of France's banking sector in the 1920s. In addition, they shed new light on the role of public debt in financial stability in an open economy.
Mots clés Interwar, International finance, Liquidity, Public debt