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dc.contributor.authorBanerji, Sanjayfr_CA
dc.contributor.authorLong, Ngo Vanfr_CA
dc.date.accessioned2004-04-02T17:02:03Z-
dc.date.available2004-04-02T17:02:03Z-
dc.date.issued2000-11fr_CA
dc.identifier.issn1198-8177fr_CA
dc.identifier.other2000s-51fr_CA
dc.identifier.urihttp://www.cirano.qc.ca/pdf/publication/2000s-51.pdffr_CA
dc.identifier.urihttps://depot.erudit.org/id/000270dd-
dc.description.abstractOn étudie un modèle qui montre que l'intermédiation active des institutions financières peut générer les fluctuations. Il s'agit d'un modèle aux générations imbriquées avec un stock de capital. Les individus sont riscophobes, tandis que les institutions financières (I.F.) ne le sont pas. On considère deux cas. Dans le premier cas, les I.F. sont actives: elles prêtent de l'argent sous la condition que les emprunteurs acceptent des restrictions sur leurs choix de projets d'investissement. Dans le deuxième cas, les I.F. sont passives. Nous démontrons que si les I.F. sont actives, les conditions de prêts peuvent créer un effet de richesse qui peut générer les fluctuations du taux d'investissement, et du P.I.B.fr
dc.description.abstractWe construct a model to show that active financial intermediation can induce economic fluctuations. We embed a financial sector in a simple overlapping generation model with a single stock of capital. Individuals are risk averse agents that face idiosyncratic risks in their business activities: Due to limited liability, agents have incentives to invest in a technology that produces high output with a smaller probability. Financial intermediaries (FIs) are risk neutral. We distinguish two scenarios. The first scenario is one with active financial intermediation: the FIs lends only on the conditions that borrowers accept restrictions on their investments. In the second scenario, financial intermediation is passive, in that the FIs lend without monitoring the activities of the borrowers. For a given loan size, the investment level under active financial intermediation is shown to be smaller than under passive financial intermediation. This fact alone creates, in the first scenario, an income effect that may generate fluctuations in investment. (This effect is absent under passive financial intermediation, and, as a result, in our model there are no fluctuations under passive financial intermediation.) Thus business cycles and possibly chaotic dynamics can be, under certain conditions, generated by active intermediation.en
dc.format.extent257828 bytes-
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoenfr_CA
dc.publisherCentre interuniversitaire de recherche en analyse des organisations (CIRANO)fr_CA
dc.relation.ispartofseriesSérie scientifique (CIRANO);2000s-51fr
dc.relation.ispartofseriesScientific series (CIRANO);2000s-51en
dc.titleCan Financial Intermediation Induce Economic Fluctuations?en
dc.typearticleen
Appears in Collections:Cahiers scientifiques

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