February 25, 2009This paper studies the effects on equity premiums of "risks after disasters", which are defined as a sharp rise in volatility of real per capita GDP growth rates immediately following disasters. This paper makes three contributions. First, we analytically demonstrate that if and only if the degree of relative prudence is higher than 2, risks after disasters decrease equity premiums. Second, we find that the differences between equity premiums with and without risks after disasters are quantitatively significant. Third, equity premiums are still higher in the case of disaster than without a disaster.グローバルCOEプログラム = Global COE Program12 p
What is an “equitable” policy for mitigating the impacts of hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, and oth...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
We illustrate the effects of heterogeneous beliefs about disasters on the equity premium and indivi...
We extend the Barro (2006) closed-economy model of the equity risk premium in the presence of extrem...
Twenty years ago, Thomas A. Rietz (1988) showed that infrequent, large drops in consumption make the...
There has been a considerable debate about whether disaster models can rationalize the equity premiu...
I review the disaster explanation of the equity premium puzzle, discussed in Barro (2006) and Rietz ...
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We extend the Barro (2006) closed-economy model of the equity risk premium in the presence of extrem...
We extend the Barro (2006) closed-economy model of the equity risk premium in the presence of extrem...
The impact of rare disasters on equity premium and term premium in a New Keynesian DSGE model is exp...
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This paper brings together two strands of the literature: Quantifying the impact of apocalyptic ris...
Increasing natural disaster losses in the past decades and expectations that this trend will acceler...
We investigate the impact of the 20 largest – in terms of insured losses – man-made or natural disas...
What is an “equitable” policy for mitigating the impacts of hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, and oth...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
We illustrate the effects of heterogeneous beliefs about disasters on the equity premium and indivi...
We extend the Barro (2006) closed-economy model of the equity risk premium in the presence of extrem...
Twenty years ago, Thomas A. Rietz (1988) showed that infrequent, large drops in consumption make the...
There has been a considerable debate about whether disaster models can rationalize the equity premiu...
I review the disaster explanation of the equity premium puzzle, discussed in Barro (2006) and Rietz ...
The Study focuses on how the equity risk premium of selected financial institutions behaved after th...
We extend the Barro (2006) closed-economy model of the equity risk premium in the presence of extrem...
We extend the Barro (2006) closed-economy model of the equity risk premium in the presence of extrem...
The impact of rare disasters on equity premium and term premium in a New Keynesian DSGE model is exp...
International audienceThis paper studies the role of preferences on the link between disasters, grow...
This paper brings together two strands of the literature: Quantifying the impact of apocalyptic ris...
Increasing natural disaster losses in the past decades and expectations that this trend will acceler...
We investigate the impact of the 20 largest – in terms of insured losses – man-made or natural disas...
What is an “equitable” policy for mitigating the impacts of hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, and oth...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
We illustrate the effects of heterogeneous beliefs about disasters on the equity premium and indivi...