Tacitus really wants to connect this to the Sejanus affair, but the banking crisis in in 33, Sejanus is dead in 31, so I'm not sure I buy it.
Given that the study of the Roman economy has turned on its head twice since 1935, I'd myself have been pretty cautious citing Frank on such a point. I too have piled through his An Economic Survey of Ancient Rome (1933/1940)...
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...but our sense of money flows and the money supply in Rome has changed a LOT since then. Thanks to a mix of coin die studies and Greenland ice cores, we know that, at least empire-wide, the money supply was expanding in this period.
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Meanwhile, following more recent models of Roman economic activity (e.g. Hopkins, "Rent, Taxes and Trade" (1995/6) might well suggest currency inflows to Rome, rather than outflows.
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