open access publication

Article, 2020

Leverage and Deepening Business-Cycle Skewness

American Economic Journal Macroeconomics, ISSN 1945-7715, 1945-7707, Volume 12, 1, Pages 245-281, 10.1257/mac.20170319

Contributors

Jensen, Henrik [1] [2] Petrella, Ivan [3] [4] Ravn, Søren Hove 0000-0002-6495-5100 [2] Santoro, Emiliano [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen, Øster Farimagsgade 5, Bld. 26, 1353 Copenhagen, Denmark, and CEPR (email: )
  2. [2] University of Copenhagen
  3. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  4. [3] University of Warwick
  5. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  6. [4] University of Warwick, Scarman Rd, CV4 7AL Coventry, United  Kingdom, and CEPR (email: )

Abstract

We document that the United States and other G7 economies have been characterized by an increasingly negative business-cycle asymmetry over the last three decades. This finding can be explained by the concurrent increase in the financial leverage of households and firms. To support this view, we devise and estimate a dynamic general equilibrium model with collateralized borrowing and occasionally binding credit constraints. Improved access to credit increases the likelihood that financial constraints become nonbinding in the face of expansionary shocks, allowing agents to freely substitute inter-temporally. Contractionary shocks, however, are further amplified by drops in collateral values, since constraints remain binding. As a result, booms become progressively smoother and more prolonged than busts. Finally, in line with recent empirical evidence, financially driven expansions lead to deeper contractions, as compared with equally sized nonfinancial expansions. (JEL D14, E23, E32, E44)

Keywords

Financial, United States, agents, asymmetry, binding, boom, borrowing, business-cycle asymmetries, bust, collateral value, collateralized borrowing, concurrent increase, constraints, contraction, contractionary shocks, credit, decades, drop, dynamic general equilibrium model, economy, empirical evidence, equilibrium model, evidence, expansion, expansionary shocks, face, financial constraints, financial leverage, findings, firms, general equilibrium model, households, increase, inter-temporal, likelihood, model, results, shock, state, units, values

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