The article shows that in a finite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig model (1983), the ex ante efficient allocation can be implemented as a unique equilibrium. This is so even in the presence of the sequential service constraint, as emphasized by Wallace (1988), whereby the bank must solve a sequence of maximization problems as depositors contact it at different times. A three-trader example with constant relative risk-aversion utility is used in order to illustrate clearly the requirements that the sequential service constraint imposes on implementation.Bank failures
This paper introduces the possibility of signaling into a finite-depositor version of the Diamond-Dy...
This paper examines the effects that capital inflows have on the financial system in a Diamond-Dybvi...
This paper re-evaluates the Diamond-Dybvig analysis of deposit insurance by constructing a model in ...
The article shows that in a finite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig model (1983), the ex ant...
This paper points out that in the well-known Diamond-Dybvig (1983) model of banking, the full inform...
In a nite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig (1983) model, the ex-ante efficient allocation is...
The article shows that in a finite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig model (1983), the ex ant...
Abstract We study the Diamond-Dybvig model of financial intermediation (Diamond, D., Dybvig, P., 198...
We study a finite-depositor version of the Diamond-Dybvig model of financial intermediation in which...
The goal of this paper is to investigate the possibility of incorporating interbank insurance among ...
This paper studies a Diamond-Dybvig model of providing insurance against unobservable liquidity shoc...
We modify the Diamond-Dybvig [3] model studied in Green and Lin [5] to incorporate a self-interested...
Are financial intermediaries – in particular, banks – inherently unstable or fragile, and if so, why...
Are financial intermediaries inherently unstable? If so, why? What does this suggest about governmen...
In this paper, we show that abandoning the Diamond and Dybvig hypothesis of a unique bank representi...
This paper introduces the possibility of signaling into a finite-depositor version of the Diamond-Dy...
This paper examines the effects that capital inflows have on the financial system in a Diamond-Dybvi...
This paper re-evaluates the Diamond-Dybvig analysis of deposit insurance by constructing a model in ...
The article shows that in a finite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig model (1983), the ex ant...
This paper points out that in the well-known Diamond-Dybvig (1983) model of banking, the full inform...
In a nite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig (1983) model, the ex-ante efficient allocation is...
The article shows that in a finite-trader version of the Diamond and Dybvig model (1983), the ex ant...
Abstract We study the Diamond-Dybvig model of financial intermediation (Diamond, D., Dybvig, P., 198...
We study a finite-depositor version of the Diamond-Dybvig model of financial intermediation in which...
The goal of this paper is to investigate the possibility of incorporating interbank insurance among ...
This paper studies a Diamond-Dybvig model of providing insurance against unobservable liquidity shoc...
We modify the Diamond-Dybvig [3] model studied in Green and Lin [5] to incorporate a self-interested...
Are financial intermediaries – in particular, banks – inherently unstable or fragile, and if so, why...
Are financial intermediaries inherently unstable? If so, why? What does this suggest about governmen...
In this paper, we show that abandoning the Diamond and Dybvig hypothesis of a unique bank representi...
This paper introduces the possibility of signaling into a finite-depositor version of the Diamond-Dy...
This paper examines the effects that capital inflows have on the financial system in a Diamond-Dybvi...
This paper re-evaluates the Diamond-Dybvig analysis of deposit insurance by constructing a model in ...