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Dynamic inefficiency in decentralized capital markets
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Dynamic inefficiency in decentralized capital markets

André Kurmann and Stanislav Rabinovich
Journal of economic theory, v 173
Jan 2018

Abstract

Bargaining Capital markets Over-the-counter markets Search
We study the efficiency implications of bargaining in frictional capital markets in which firms match bilaterally with dealers in order to buy or sell capital. We show how two of the distinguishing characteristics of capital – ownership and the intertemporal nature of investment – give rise to a dynamic inefficiency. Firms that anticipate buying capital in the future overinvest because this increases their outside option of no trade in negotiations with dealers in the future, thereby lowering the bargained purchase price. Vice versa, firms that anticipate selling capital in the future strategically underinvest because this increases the bargained sale price. If the only motive for trade is capital depreciation, there is overinvestment. With stochastic productivity, high-productivity firms underinvest and low-productivity firms overinvest. In equilibrium, the inefficiency interacts with the externality from dealer entry and implies that no bargaining power achieves the constrained–efficient allocation. We propose a regressive tax on capital that can restore efficiency. Finally, we calibrate the model to data on physical capital markets and show that depending on bargaining power, the welfare loss from the inefficiency can be large.

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This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#10 Reduced Inequalities
#1 No Poverty
#8 Decent Work and Economic Growth

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Economics
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