The post-WWII period (roughly through the Bretton Woods era) was an unusually quiet period for banking crises—visible when plotting crisis incidence from 1800 to 2008—partly because international and within-system capital mobility was restrained and partly because much of the world was rebuilding real, productive 'low-hanging fruit' after wartime destruction.

causalpending

Speaker

Carmen Reinhart

Evidence Quote

it's very quiet in terms of the incidence of crises

Source

Carmen Reinhart on Financial Crises 11/23/2009EconTalk
Created: 6/15/2026, 9:20:19 AM

My Notes

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