Short run and long run effects of banking in a New Keynesian model

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Date
2010Version
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Type
Documento de trabajo / Lan gaiak
Impact
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nodoi-noplumx
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Abstract
This paper introduces both endogenous capital accumulation and deposit-in-advance requirements for investment in the banking model of Goodfriend and McCallum (2007). Impulse response functions from technology and monetary shocks show some attenuation effect due to the procyclical behavior of the marginal finance cost. In addition, an adverse financial shock produces sizeable declines in output, i ...
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This paper introduces both endogenous capital accumulation and deposit-in-advance requirements for investment in the banking model of Goodfriend and McCallum (2007). Impulse response functions from technology and monetary shocks show some attenuation effect due to the procyclical behavior of the marginal finance cost. In addition, an adverse financial shock produces sizeable declines in output, inflation and interest rates. In the long-run analysis, we find the following effects of banking intermediation: (i) the stock of capital increases to take advantage of its collateral services, and (ii) consumption and labor fall in response to the finance cost attached to purchases of goods. Using the baseline calibrated model, we show how a 10% increase in banking efficiency would result in a permanent welfare gain equivalent to 0.3% of output. [--]
Subject
Financial attenuator,
Financial shocks,
Welfare cost of banking
Serie
Documentos de Trabajo DE - ES Lan Gaiak /
1002
Departament
Universidad Pública de Navarra. Departamento de Economía /
Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa. Ekonomia Saila
Sponsorship
The author would like to thank Fundación Ramón Areces and the Ministerio de Educación of Spain (research project ECO2008-02641) for their financial support.