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INIZIO_TESTO_DA_INDICIZZARE

RESEARCH PROGRAM

italiano - inglese

FINANCIAL FRAGILITY AND TECHNICAL PROGRESS WITH HETEROGENEOUS AGENTS AND SOCIAL INTERACTION: MODELS, SIMULATIONS, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS

Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Abstract
The national research project is centered around a framework (described in section 2.1) for the analysis of financing, production, investment and technology adoption decisions of interacting, heterogeneous firms. Heterogeneity concerns size, expectations, state of technology and degree of financial fragility. Therefore, the framework is characterized, as to methodology, by the emphasis on heterogeneous interacting agents and, as to the contents, by the focus on the nexus of firms' capital structure, production, investment and technology adoption. This nexus is deeply affected by monetary policy. The local units will contribute to the specification, completion and development of this framework (on the base of the division of labor outlined at 2.4) and of complementary research areas. The empirical research will be carried out developing and using specific databases for econometric studies.

Principal Investigator
Domenico DELLI GATTI Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Research Objectives
The national research group will focus on a framework (outlined in Delli Gatti et al. (2004) centered around the financing, production investment and technology adoption decisions of firms in the presence of "financial frictions". In this context, characterized by a financing hierarchy and the risk of bankruptcy, macroeconomic outcomes are the results of social interaction - both strategic and non-strategic (mean field effects) - among heterogeneous agents. The dynamics of macro-variables are affected by the distribution of firms by size, state of technology and financial conditions, captured by indicators of financial fragility such as the leverage ratio (in the above mentioned framework we use the equity ratio, an indicator of financial robustness inversely correlated to the leverage ratio) and are affected, in this setting, by the adoption and diffusion of new technologies in which a relevant role is played by financing of R&D expenditure and technological learning.
We will develop, therefore, models of agent-based economies in which the financial constraints of heterogeneous interacting agents affect real activity (production, investment, technology adoption) and financial developments (Stock price dynamics, volume and allocation of credit extended). These models can be built starting from the individual laws of motion, obtaining the dynamics of the aggregates by means of summation and averaging (bottom-up procedure). They usually yield complex dynamics both at >>>

First Results
First of all, we will write essays and position papers which outline specific lines of research in fields which are covered by more than one research unit. However, also in this first stage there will be original results obtained building, developing and extending the models more familiar to some of the research groups. The empirical work will be mostly preliminary to the econometric research which will be carried out mainly in the second stage.In this second stage, we aim at producing mainly innovative papers to be presented in meetings, seminars, workshops and to be published possibly in the major journals. Some of these workshops will be jointly organized by the local research units.

Timescale
24 months
National and international background
The macroeconomic impact of capital market imperfections has been an active international research field (with a basically New Keynesian flavour) since the early ‘80s. A growing body of results shows that these "financial frictions" (Cooley and Quadrini, 2001) may have far-reaching consequences on the dynamics of aggregate income, policy effectiveness, the sources and propagation of business fluctuations. The foundations of this macroeconomics of imperfect capital markets rest on the violation of the Modigliani-Miller irrelevance theorem, which is at the root of three well known phenomena: (i) financing hierarchy: different ways of raising funds have different costs for the borrower; (ii) bank dependence: bank debt is the second most important source of finance (after internal funds) and for many medium-small borrowers it is the sole external source of finance; (iii) financial constraints: some classes of borrowers have serious difficulties in accessing capital markets; hence their ability to invest is constrained by the availability of internal funds.
As a consequence firms' spending capacity depends on their internal assets (net worth or equity base) - as emphasized by the literature on the balance sheet channel - and on banks' lending policy (lending channel). Bank dependence has a major implication in that levered firms face bankruptcy risk. In the Greenwald-Stiglitz approach, from the attempt to internalize the risk of bankruptcy follows a positive relationship >>>