This paper explores how the occurence of local indeterminacy and endogenous business cycles relates to dynamic inefficiency, as defined by Malinvaud (1953), Phelps (1965) and Cass (1972). We follow Reichlin (1986) and Grandmont (1993) by considering a two-period overlapping generations model of capital accumulation with labor-leisure choice into the first-period of an agent's life and consumption in both pariods. We first show that local indeterminacy and Hopf bifurcation are necessarily associated with a capital-labor ratio that is, at the steady state, larger than the Golden Rule level. Consequently, paths converging asymptotically towards the steady state are shown to be dynamically inefficient, as there always exists another trajectory ...