We study banking with ex ante moral hazard. Resolving the misalignment of the incentives between banks and depositors requires early liquidation with positive probability : efficient risk-sharing between depositors is no longer implementable. In a closed region with a single bank, we show that (i) with costless and perfect monitoring, contracts with bank runs of the equilibrium path of play improve on contracts with transfers, (ii) when the bank’s actions are non-contractible, equilibrium bank runs driven by incentives are linked to liquidity provision by banks. With multiple regions linked via an interbank market, with local moral hazard, we show that implementing second-best allocations requires both ex-ante trade in inter-bank markets an...
This paper examines the relative degrees of risk sharing provided by demand deposit contracts and eq...
We analyse risk-taking behaviour of banks in the context of spatial competition. Banks mobilise unse...
This paper examines the relative degrees of risk sharing provided by demand deposit contracts and eq...
We study banking with ex ante moral hazard. Resolving the misalignment of the incentives between ban...
We study banking with ex ante moral hazard. Resolving the misalignment of the incentives between ban...
Bank crises, by interrupting liquidity provision, have been viewed as resulting in welfare losses. ...
Bank runs driven by depositor coordination failure can be prevented using banking contracts with an ...
This paper extends Diamond and Dybvig’s model [J. Political Economy 91 (1983) 401] to a framework in...
We modify the Diamond-Dybvig [3] model studied in Green and Lin [5] to incorporate a self-interested...
This paper extends Diamond and Dybvig’s model [J. Political Economy 91 (1983) 401] to a framework in...
This paper extends Diamond and Dybvig’s model [J. Political Economy 91 (1983) 401] to a framework in...
Under what conditions should bank runs be tolerated? We study a model with moral hazard in banking w...
Diamond and Dybvig (1983) provide an analytical framework of modern banking: The key role of banks i...
Financial contagion is modeled as an equilibrium phenomenon in a dynamic setting with incomplete inf...
A bank, acting as a central planner under aggregate full certainty, optimizes liquidity allocation b...
This paper examines the relative degrees of risk sharing provided by demand deposit contracts and eq...
We analyse risk-taking behaviour of banks in the context of spatial competition. Banks mobilise unse...
This paper examines the relative degrees of risk sharing provided by demand deposit contracts and eq...
We study banking with ex ante moral hazard. Resolving the misalignment of the incentives between ban...
We study banking with ex ante moral hazard. Resolving the misalignment of the incentives between ban...
Bank crises, by interrupting liquidity provision, have been viewed as resulting in welfare losses. ...
Bank runs driven by depositor coordination failure can be prevented using banking contracts with an ...
This paper extends Diamond and Dybvig’s model [J. Political Economy 91 (1983) 401] to a framework in...
We modify the Diamond-Dybvig [3] model studied in Green and Lin [5] to incorporate a self-interested...
This paper extends Diamond and Dybvig’s model [J. Political Economy 91 (1983) 401] to a framework in...
This paper extends Diamond and Dybvig’s model [J. Political Economy 91 (1983) 401] to a framework in...
Under what conditions should bank runs be tolerated? We study a model with moral hazard in banking w...
Diamond and Dybvig (1983) provide an analytical framework of modern banking: The key role of banks i...
Financial contagion is modeled as an equilibrium phenomenon in a dynamic setting with incomplete inf...
A bank, acting as a central planner under aggregate full certainty, optimizes liquidity allocation b...
This paper examines the relative degrees of risk sharing provided by demand deposit contracts and eq...
We analyse risk-taking behaviour of banks in the context of spatial competition. Banks mobilise unse...
This paper examines the relative degrees of risk sharing provided by demand deposit contracts and eq...