Résumé
This paper integrates banks into a two-sector neoclassical growth model to account for the fact that a fraction of firms relies on banks to finance their investments. There are four major contributions to the literature: First, although banks’ leverage amplifies shocks, the endogenous response of leverage to shocks is an automatic stabilizer that improves the resilience of the economy. In particular, financial and labor market institutions are essential factors that determine the strength of this automatic stabilization. Second, there is a mix of publicly financed bank re-capitalization, dividend payout restrictions, and consumption taxes that stimulates a Pareto-improving rapid build-up of bank equity and accelerates economic recovery after a slump in the banking sector. Third, the model replicates typical patterns of financing over the business cycle: procyclical bank leverage, procyclical bank lending, and countercyclical bond financing. Fourth, the framework preserves its analytical tractability wherefore it can serve as a macro-banking module that can be easily integrated into more complex economic environments.
Mots-clés
Financial intermediation; capital accumulation; banking crisis; macroeconomic shocks; business cycles; bust-boom cycles; managing recoveries;
Codes JEL
- E21: Consumption • Saving • Wealth
- E32: Business Fluctuations • Cycles
- G21: Banks • Depository Institutions • Micro Finance Institutions • Mortgages
- G28: Government Policy and Regulation
Remplacé par
Hans Gersbach, Jean-Charles Rochet et Martin Scheffel, « Financial Intermediation, Capital Accumulation, and Crisis Recovery », Review of Finance, vol. rfac046, 2022.
Référence
Hans Gersbach, Jean-Charles Rochet et Martin Scheffel, « Financial Intermediation, Capital Accumulation and Crisis Recovery », TSE Working Paper, n° 18-885, janvier 2018.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
TSE Working Paper, n° 18-885, janvier 2018