From Finance to Fascism: the Real Effect of Germany's 1931 Banking Crisis

S. Doerr, Stefan Gissler, J. Peydró, H. Voth
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Do financial crises radicalize voters? We analyze a canonical case - Germany during the Great Depression. After a severe banking crisis in 1931, caused by foreign shocks and political inaction, radical voting increased sharply in the following year. Democracy collapsed six months later. We collect new data on pre-crisis bank-firm connections and show that banking distress led to markedly more radical voting, both through economic and non-economic channels. Firms linked to two large banks that failed experienced a bank-driven fall in lending, which caused reductions in their wage bill and a fall in city-level incomes. This in turn increased Nazi Party support between 1930 and 1932/33, especially in cities with a history of anti-Semitism. While both failing banks had a large negative economic impact, only exposure to the bank led by a Jewish chairman strongly predicts Nazi voting. Local exposure to the banking crisis simultaneously led to a decline in Jewish-gentile marriages and is associated with more deportations and attacks on synagogues after 1933.
从金融到法西斯主义:1931年德国银行危机的真实影响
金融危机会让选民变得激进吗?我们分析了一个典型的案例——大萧条时期的德国。1931年,由于外国冲击和政治不作为,发生了严重的银行危机,激进投票在接下来的一年急剧增加。6个月后,民主崩溃。我们收集了危机前银行与公司关系的新数据,并表明银行业的困境通过经济和非经济渠道导致了明显更激进的投票。与两家倒闭的大银行有关联的公司经历了银行驱动的贷款下降,这导致他们的工资账单减少,城市居民收入下降。这反过来又增加了纳粹党在1930年至1932/33年间的支持率,特别是在有反犹历史的城市。虽然这两家倒闭的银行都对经济产生了巨大的负面影响,但只有对由犹太人董事长领导的银行的敞口,才能强烈预测纳粹的投票结果。当地对银行危机的暴露同时导致了犹太人与非犹太人婚姻的下降,并与1933年后更多的驱逐和对犹太教堂的袭击有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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