Collateral, default penalties and almost finite-time solvency


Autoria(s): Martins-da-Rocha, Victor Filipe; Vailakis, Yiannis
Data(s)

13/05/2008

13/05/2008

04/03/2008

Resumo

We argue that it is possible to adapt the approach of imposing restrictions on available plans through finitely effective debt constraints, introduced by Levine and Zame (1996), to encompass models with default and collateral. Along this line, we introduce in the setting of Araujo, Páscoa and Torres-Martínez (2002) and Páscoa and Seghir (2008) the concept of almost finite-time solvency. We show that the conditions imposed in these two papers to rule out Ponzi schemes implicitly restrict actions to be almost finite-time solvent. We define the notion of equilibrium with almost finite-time solvency and look on sufficient conditions for its existence. Assuming a mild assumption on default penalties, namely that agents are myopic with respect to default penalties, we prove that existence is guaranteed (and Ponzi schemes are ruled out) when actions are restricted to be almost finite-time solvent. The proof is very simple and intuitive. In particular, the main existence results in Araujo et al. (2002) and Páscoa and Seghir (2008) are simple corollaries of our existence result.

Identificador

01048910

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/415

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Escola de Pós-Graduação em Economia da FGV

Relação

Ensaios Econômicos;670

Palavras-Chave #Infinite horizon economies #Incomplete markets #Debt constraints #Default #Collateral #Ponzi schemes #Economia
Tipo

Working Paper