Optimal government bond supply is examined under asymmetric information and safe asset scarcity. Corporations issue junk debt when demand for safe debt is high since uninformed investors then migrate to risky overheated debt markets. Uninformed demand stimulates informed speculation, driving debt prices toward fundamentals, encouraging pooling at high leverage. As borrower of first resort, government can issue bonds, siphoning off uninformed demand for risky corporate debt, reducing wasteful informed speculation. Government bonds eliminate pooling at high leverage or improve risk sharing in such equilibria. Optimal government bond supply is increasing in demand for safe assets and non-monotonic in marginal Q
We develop a macroeconomic model where the government does not guarantee to repay debt. We ask whet...
The past decade saw the flourishing of risky, high-yield corporate debt, often called junk bonds. ...
I develop a tractable macro model with endogenous asset liquidity to understand monetary–fiscal inte...
Optimal government bond supply is examined under asymmetric information and safe asset scarcity. Cor...
We examine optimal supply of safe government bonds accounting for their e¤ect on corporate debt mark...
We examine optimal provision of riskless government bonds under asymmetric information and safe asse...
This paper constructs a simple general equilibrium model to analyse the interactions between the fin...
With governments around the world facing potential strain to mount responses to COVID-19, state-cont...
I examine whether a benevolent government can improve on the free market allocation by setting capit...
Is the sovereign debt market information-sensitive to the true borrowing amount? If yes, does asymme...
While much attention has been focused on the optimal ratio of a firm's debt to equity, the "optimal"...
This paper considers whether eliminating the stock of government debt outstanding would reduce welfa...
The joint supply of public and private liquidity is examined when financial intermediaries issue bot...
capital flows global finance global financial crisis inequality power public debtThis article offers...
The rapidly growing federal government debt has become a concern for policy makers and the public. Y...
We develop a macroeconomic model where the government does not guarantee to repay debt. We ask whet...
The past decade saw the flourishing of risky, high-yield corporate debt, often called junk bonds. ...
I develop a tractable macro model with endogenous asset liquidity to understand monetary–fiscal inte...
Optimal government bond supply is examined under asymmetric information and safe asset scarcity. Cor...
We examine optimal supply of safe government bonds accounting for their e¤ect on corporate debt mark...
We examine optimal provision of riskless government bonds under asymmetric information and safe asse...
This paper constructs a simple general equilibrium model to analyse the interactions between the fin...
With governments around the world facing potential strain to mount responses to COVID-19, state-cont...
I examine whether a benevolent government can improve on the free market allocation by setting capit...
Is the sovereign debt market information-sensitive to the true borrowing amount? If yes, does asymme...
While much attention has been focused on the optimal ratio of a firm's debt to equity, the "optimal"...
This paper considers whether eliminating the stock of government debt outstanding would reduce welfa...
The joint supply of public and private liquidity is examined when financial intermediaries issue bot...
capital flows global finance global financial crisis inequality power public debtThis article offers...
The rapidly growing federal government debt has become a concern for policy makers and the public. Y...
We develop a macroeconomic model where the government does not guarantee to repay debt. We ask whet...
The past decade saw the flourishing of risky, high-yield corporate debt, often called junk bonds. ...
I develop a tractable macro model with endogenous asset liquidity to understand monetary–fiscal inte...