I'm not sure we should regard the affair as a major crisis. Dio gives it literally only a sentence (58.21.5) and thinks it mainly important because it resulted in the death of a notable equestrian by suicide before Tiberius bails everyone out.
Apart from Puteoli, (D. Jones, The Bankers of Puteoli (2006)), there really aren't many large bodies of merchant account books which survive from this period.
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I mean, this is the issue that Peter Temin runs into. He builds out his economic theory, but often struggles to really find the evidence that can support it. His theoretical reconstruction is plausible, but it isn't *necessary* from the evidence.
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And I say that as someone who is mostly a 'Modernist' (which is to say, in the same camp at Temin)! In a lot of cases, the evidence simply doesn't exist for certainty anywhere.
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