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Creator: Sargent, Thomas J. and Sims, Christopher A. Series: New methods in business cycle research Keyword: Observable-index models, Causal orderings, Unobservable-index models, Index models, and Time series Subject (JEL): E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles and C58 - Financial Econometrics -
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Creator: Lacker, Jeffrey Malcolm and Schreft, Stacey Lee Series: Monetary theory and financial intermediation Abstract: We describe a stochastic economic environment in which the mix of money and trade credit used as means of payment is endogenous. The economy has an infinite horizon, spatial separation and a credit-related transaction cost, but no capital. We find that the equilibrium prices of arbitrary contingent claims to future currency differ from those from one-good cash-in-advance models. This anomaly is directly related to the endogeneity of the mix of media of exchange used. In particular, nominal interest rates affect the risk-free real rate of return. The model also has implications for some long-standing issues in monetary policy and for time series analysis using money and trade credit.
Subject (JEL): G12 - Asset Pricing; Trading Volume; Bond Interest Rates and E42 - Monetary Systems; Standards; Regimes; Government and the Monetary System; Payment Systems -
Creator: Kehoe, Timothy Jerome, 1953-; Kiyotaki, Nobuhiro; and Wright, Randall, 1956- Series: Monetary theory and financial intermediation Abstract: We extend the analysis of Kiyotaki and Wright, who study an economy in which the different commodities that serve as media of exchange are determined endogenously. Kiyotaki and Wright consider only symmetric, steady-state, pure-strategy equilibria, and find that for some parameter values no such equilibria exist. We consider mixed-strategy equilibria and dynamic equilibria. We prove that a steady-state equilibrium exists for all parameter values and that the number of steady-state equilibria is generically finite. We also show, however, that there may be a continuum of dynamic equilibria. Further, some dynamic equilibria display cycles.
Subject (JEL): D51 - Exchange and Production Economies and E40 - Money and Interest Rates: General -
Creator: Bordo, Michael D.; Rappoport, Peter; and Schwartz, Anna J. (Anna Jacobson), 1915-2012 Series: Monetary theory and financial intermediation Abstract: In this paper we examine the evidence for two competing views of how monetary and financial disturbances influenced the real economy during the national banking era, 1880-1914. According to the monetarist view, monetary disturbances affected the real economy through changes on the liability side of the banking system's balance sheet independent of the composition of bank portfolios. According to the credit rationing view, equilibrium credit rationing in a world of asymmetric information can explain short-run fluctuations in real output. Using structural VARs we incorporate monetary variables in credit models and credit variables in monetarist models, with inconclusive results. To resolve this ambiguity, we invoke the institutional features of the national banking era. Most of the variation in bank loans is accounted for by loans secured by stock, which in turn reflect volatility in the stock market. When account is taken of the stock market, the influence of credit in the VAR model is greatly reduced, while the influence of money remains robust. The breakdown of the composition of bank loans into stock market loans (traded in open asset markets) and other business loans (a possible setting for credit rationing) reveals that other business loans remained remarkably stable over the business cycle.
Subject (JEL): N21 - Economic History: Financial Markets and Institutions: U.S.; Canada: Pre-1913 and N11 - Economic History: Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics; Industrial Structure; Growth; Fluctuations: U.S.; Canada: Pre-1913