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Credit Market Imperfections (credit + market_imperfection)
Selected AbstractsCredit market imperfections and exchange rate variabilityCANADIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, Issue 2 2000Wai-Ming Ho In this paper a two-country overlapping generations model is presented in which the roles of financial factors in the international monetary transmission mechanism are studied and whether and how the two types of credit market imperfections, limited participation, and costly state verification may contribute to the high variability of exchange rates are examined. Liquidity effects generated by monetary disturbances are shown to have qualitatively similar effects on the world economy in the perfect information case and in the costly information case. However, quantitative differences provide dfferent predictions about the variability of economic variables in the world economy. JEL Classification: F31, F41 Ce mémoire présente un modèle de deux pays où les générations se chevauchent pour étudier le rôle des facteurs financiers dans le mécanisme de transmission monétaire international, et pour examiner si les deux types d'imperfection (participation limitée et contrôle étatique coûteux) peuvent contribuer à une grande variabilité des taux de change et de quelle manière. On montre que les effets de liquidité engendrés par les perturbations monétaires ont les mêmes effets qualitatifs sur l'économie mondiale que l'information soit parfaite ou coûteuse. Cependant, il y a des différences quantitatives. Ces différences suggèrent des écarts dans les prévisions quant à la variabilité des variables économiques dans l'économie mondiale. [source] Land tax and economic growth under credit market imperfectionINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC THEORY, Issue 2 2007Masaya Sakuragawa H20; O40 We study the general equilibrium effects of land taxation on economic growth by extending the model developed by Kiyotaki and Moore (1997) to an endogenous growth model, where land is used not only as an input of production but also as collateral. Land taxation tends to hamper economic growth through the credit-contraction effect, but the overall direction on economic growth depends on the redistribution scheme of the tax revenue. Surprisingly, we show that if the tax revenue is fully refunded to entrepreneurs, the economy grows faster than a no-taxation economy. We calibrate our model and show that if taxation on land is raised by 1 percent, the land price initially falls by approximately 9.09 percent, while the economy grows faster by 0.6%. [source] Local Banks Efficiency and EmploymentLABOUR, Issue 3 2008Patrizia Ordine We argue that if banks are not efficient in monitoring the borrowers in the presence of asymmetric information, credit market imperfections have real effects. We estimate dynamic equations using system generalized method of moments (GMM) for bank loans and employment on panel data for Italian firms. The system GMM estimates indicate that the impact of credit market on employment is higher where the local financial market is less developed, asymmetric information is widespread, bank managers are less efficient in assessing the firms' solvency and do not use appropriate methods to evaluate the borrowers' payback capacity. [source] Credit market imperfections and exchange rate variabilityCANADIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, Issue 2 2000Wai-Ming Ho In this paper a two-country overlapping generations model is presented in which the roles of financial factors in the international monetary transmission mechanism are studied and whether and how the two types of credit market imperfections, limited participation, and costly state verification may contribute to the high variability of exchange rates are examined. Liquidity effects generated by monetary disturbances are shown to have qualitatively similar effects on the world economy in the perfect information case and in the costly information case. However, quantitative differences provide dfferent predictions about the variability of economic variables in the world economy. JEL Classification: F31, F41 Ce mémoire présente un modèle de deux pays où les générations se chevauchent pour étudier le rôle des facteurs financiers dans le mécanisme de transmission monétaire international, et pour examiner si les deux types d'imperfection (participation limitée et contrôle étatique coûteux) peuvent contribuer à une grande variabilité des taux de change et de quelle manière. On montre que les effets de liquidité engendrés par les perturbations monétaires ont les mêmes effets qualitatifs sur l'économie mondiale que l'information soit parfaite ou coûteuse. Cependant, il y a des différences quantitatives. Ces différences suggèrent des écarts dans les prévisions quant à la variabilité des variables économiques dans l'économie mondiale. [source] Credit Markets With Differences in Abilities: Education, Distribution, and GrowthINTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 3 2000José De Gregorio This article presents an endogenous growth model in which credit markets affect time allocation of individuals with different educational abilities. Credit markets allow the more able to specialize in studying and the less able to specialize in working. This specialization can increase growth and welfare. This article also shows that in economies with high (low) levels of education abilities, the opening of credit markets induces a more disperse (equal) income distribution. The role of intergenerational transfers in overcoming the absence of credit markets is also discussed, as well as other forms of credit markets imperfections. [source] |