The announcement today that Greek banks will be closed at
least until the referendum on Sunday was apparently prompted by the decision of
the European Central Bank (ECB) to end the financial support that has allowed
the banks to function despite people
withdrawing their money for months. The behaviour of the public in
withdrawing their money has been described as a ‘bank run’ and, in some places,
a ‘mass
panic’. Based on our research
and the wider literature on so-called ‘panics’ in crowds, three simple points
can be made about the current Greek bank run.
1. It is misleading to describe the behaviour of people
withdrawing their money as ‘mass panic’. In ordinary conversation, the term ‘panic’
is used to talk about, and to do, different things (such as blaming,
excusing and so on); but one consistent association is that of the abandonment
of social rules through undue haste. Yet the crowds depicted queuing at Greek
ATMs, like
those observed by sociologists studying bank runs, have been cooperative and
orderly. Another association of the term ‘panic’ is extreme or sudden emotion.
But, as is often the case in bank runs, the people queuing were also relatively
calm. This suggests that emotion is not the defining issue in bank runs at all.
2. Participating in a bank run, particularly when it’s
already begun, is often a reasonable course of action for the
individuals concerned. Another implication of the term ‘panic’ is that such
behaviour is self-defeating and irrational. In his study of the
Home State Savings Bank Run in Cincinnati in 1985, Johnson pointed out that,
when everybody else is taking their money out, the real risk is not to oneself
but rather being last in the queue and the money runs out. All the individual
withdrawals may lead to the collapse of the bank, and so have damaging
consequences for the wider collective (including those who have yet to take
their money out); yet appeals for people to be patient or to trust the bank would
only be heeded where they perceive others (including those other banks and
businesses withdrawing funds) to be patient and trusting.
3. Reassurances and other communicative acts may inadvertently
create and sustain a bank run. In their
study of the 2007 Northern Rock bank run, Gillespie and Cornish note that
when the Bank of England gave Northern Rock an emergency loan, this was widely
seen as a signal of the bank’s imminent demise. The BBC reported that ‘Treasury Select
Committee chairman John McFall urged Northern Rock customers not to panic’.
Yet, in a situation where trust was diminishing, such reassurances are likely
to have backfire effects – which was precisely the case for Northern Rock.
A last point is that one reason that bank runs are described
as panics is because the run is apparently
based on a false belief or rumour. From the outside, and with access to all
the relevant information, the commentator might be able to judge that the
rumours were false – for example that the bank is not really in trouble (yet)
and that there is no need (yet) to withdraw funds. But in the current context,
when bankers and their allies in government have repeatedly lied and have constructed
complex arrangements for their own profits around a series of financial fictions,
who’s to say that the rumour among the public about the trustworthiness of the
bank is an unreasonable belief? Who should people trust?
Arabic version:
https://blogs.sussex.ac.uk/crowdsidentities/2015/06/30/the-psychology-of-bank-runs-arabic-version/
Greek version:
https://blogs.sussex.ac.uk/crowdsidentities/2015/07/03/psychology-of-bank-runs-greek-version/
Arabic version:
https://blogs.sussex.ac.uk/crowdsidentities/2015/06/30/the-psychology-of-bank-runs-arabic-version/
Greek version:
https://blogs.sussex.ac.uk/crowdsidentities/2015/07/03/psychology-of-bank-runs-greek-version/