Banks have a vital role to play in financing investment and trade. In recent years, however, they have encountered increasing difficulty in bringing money where it is needed. This paper argues there is a structural feature of the monetary and financial system that largely determines the conditions and incentives for banking activity, driving them astray from their proper task. This feature is liquidity, i.e. the interchangeability of assets and money. Liquidity is commonly viewed as a positive and desirable characteristic of the financial system, since it is assumed to encourage the funneling of money toward the most promising investments. However, as crises show, liquidity also allows the opposite flow, the liquidation of investments and t...
The money supply composition has shifted towards liquid securities created by financial intermediari...
The banking sector is one of the most highly regulated sectors in the economy. However, in contrast ...
Diamond and Rajan (J Finance 55:2431–2465, 2000; Am Econ Rev Papers Proc 91:422–425, 2001a; Carnegie...
B anks make loans that cannot be sold quickly at a high price. Banks issuedemand deposits that allow...
Both investors and borrowers are concerned about liquidity. Investors desire liquidity because they ...
What is the effect of financial crises and their resolution on banks ’ choice of liquidity? When ban...
In most banking models, money is merely modeled as a medium of transactions, but in reality, money i...
The relative liquidity of financial assets is significantly influenced by the Central Bank’s willing...
Loans are illiquid when a lender needs relationship-specific skills to collect them. Consequently, i...
Of the maxims of orthodox finance none, surely, is more anti-social than the fetish of liquidity, th...
One reason why the 2007–2009 financial crisis was so severe and had a global impact was massive illi...
The emerging markets for credit derivatives have improved the liquidity of bank assets by providing ...
This paper develops a model of banking fragility driven by aggregate liquidity shortages. Inefficie...
The money supply composition has shifted towards liquid securities created by financial intermediari...
The banking sector is one of the most highly regulated sectors in the economy. However, in contrast ...
The money supply composition has shifted towards liquid securities created by financial intermediari...
The banking sector is one of the most highly regulated sectors in the economy. However, in contrast ...
Diamond and Rajan (J Finance 55:2431–2465, 2000; Am Econ Rev Papers Proc 91:422–425, 2001a; Carnegie...
B anks make loans that cannot be sold quickly at a high price. Banks issuedemand deposits that allow...
Both investors and borrowers are concerned about liquidity. Investors desire liquidity because they ...
What is the effect of financial crises and their resolution on banks ’ choice of liquidity? When ban...
In most banking models, money is merely modeled as a medium of transactions, but in reality, money i...
The relative liquidity of financial assets is significantly influenced by the Central Bank’s willing...
Loans are illiquid when a lender needs relationship-specific skills to collect them. Consequently, i...
Of the maxims of orthodox finance none, surely, is more anti-social than the fetish of liquidity, th...
One reason why the 2007–2009 financial crisis was so severe and had a global impact was massive illi...
The emerging markets for credit derivatives have improved the liquidity of bank assets by providing ...
This paper develops a model of banking fragility driven by aggregate liquidity shortages. Inefficie...
The money supply composition has shifted towards liquid securities created by financial intermediari...
The banking sector is one of the most highly regulated sectors in the economy. However, in contrast ...
The money supply composition has shifted towards liquid securities created by financial intermediari...
The banking sector is one of the most highly regulated sectors in the economy. However, in contrast ...
Diamond and Rajan (J Finance 55:2431–2465, 2000; Am Econ Rev Papers Proc 91:422–425, 2001a; Carnegie...