Financial Crises, Pecuniary Externalities, and Financial Regulation
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017 3:15 PM – 5:15 PM
Swissotel Chicago, Zurich B
- Chair: Arvind Krishnamurthy, Stanford University
Multiple Equilibria in Open Economy Models With Collateral Constraints: Overborrowing Revisited
Abstract
Open economy models with collateral constraints display nonconvexities for plausible parameter configurations. These nonconvexities can give rise to multiple equilibria. Existing quantitative studies have avoided this problem by choosing parameter configurations for which nonconvexities disappear. This paper establishes analytically the existence of multiple equilibria in infinite-horizon open-economy models in which tradable and nontradable output serves as collateral. In this environment, the economy displays self-fulfilling financial crises in which pessimistic views about the value of collateral induces agents to deleverage. The paper shows that under plausible calibrations, there exist equilibria with underborrowing. This result stands in contrast to the overborrowing result stressed in the related literature. Underborrowing emerges in the present context because in economies that are prone to self-fulfilling financial crises, individual agents engage in excessive precautionary savings as a way to self insure. The underborrowing equilibrium displays less frequent financial crises than is optimal.A New Dilemma: Capital Controls and Monetary Policy in Sudden Stop Economies
Abstract
The dangers of high capital flow volatility and sudden stops have led economists to promote the use of capital controls as an addition to monetary policy in emerging market economies. This paper studies thebenefits of capital controls and monetary policy in an open economy with financial frictions, nominal
rigidities, and sudden stops. Specifically, international borrowing must be in foreign currency and
collateralized by units of domestic capital whose value fluctuates over time; when the collateral
constraint binds there is an inefficient financial accelerator effect that leads to sharp declines in output and employment along with a large decline in asset prices and a sharp depreciation of the real exchange rate. We have three main results. First, during a crisis optimal monetary policy deviates from price stability in order to stimulate the economy; this effect is small unless both nominal wages and prices are rigid. Second, the effects of commitment depend critically on the nature of the collateral constraint ‐‐ if collateral is valued at its current price, commitment gains are negligible and capital controls are welfare‐improving, whereas if collateral is valued at its expected price tomorrow commitment gains are significantly larger and capital controls reduce welfare but are used in a time‐consistent equilibrium anyway. Third, under the expected value constraint there is no scope for macro‐prudential interventions ‐ neither nominal interest rates nor capital inflow taxes are changed unless the economy is currently in a crisis, independent of whether there is a potential crisis in the future.
Fire-Sale Externalities
Abstract
This paper characterizes the efficiency properties of competitive economies with financial constraints and fire sales. We show that two distinct pecuniary externalities occur in such settings: distributive externalities that arise from incomplete insurance markets and can take any sign; and collateral externalities that arise from price-dependent financial constraints and are conducive to over-borrowing. For each type of externality, we identify three sufficient statistics that determine optimal taxes on financing and investment decisions to implement constrained efficient allocations. We illustrate how to employ our framework in a number of applications, which highlight how small changes in parameters may cause the sufficient statistics that drive distributive externalities to flip sign, leading to either under- or over-borrowing. We also show that financial amplification is neither necessary nor sufficient to generate inefficient fire-sale externalities.Discussant(s)
Eduardo Davila
, New York University
Sebastian Di Tella
, Stanford University
Andres Drenik
, Columbia University
Arvind Krishnamurthy
, Stanford University
JEL Classifications
- E3 - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles
- F3 - International Finance