Credit Horizons

Working Paper: NBER ID: w28742

Authors: Nobuhiro Kiyotaki; John Moore; Shengxing Zhang

Abstract: Entrepreneurs appear to borrow largely against their near-term revenues, even when their investment has a longer horizon. In this paper, we develop a model of credit horizons. A question of particular concern to us is whether persistently low interest rates can stifle economic activity. With this in mind, our model is of a small open economy where the world interest rate is taken to be exogenous. We show that a permanent fall in the interest rate can reduce aggregate investment and growth, and even lead to a drop in the welfare of everyone in the domestic economy. We use our framework to examine how credit horizons interact with plant dynamics and the evolution of productivity. Finally, we speculate that the measurement of total investment may camouflage the true level of productive investment in plant and human capital, and give too rosy a picture of property-fuelled booms sparked by low interest rates.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: E44


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
world interest rate (r) (E43)borrowing capacity of entrepreneurs (D25)
world interest rate (r) (E43)willingness of savers to pay for new plant investments (G31)
willingness of savers to pay for new plant investments (G31)Emma's ability to borrow (G51)
Emma's ability to borrow (G51)investment capacity (G31)
world interest rate (r) (E43)present value of long-term obligations (G32)
present value of long-term obligations (G32)willingness of savers to pay for new plant investments (G31)
Emma's investment capacity (E22)overall economic activity (E66)
world interest rate (r) (E43)Pareto deterioration in welfare (D69)

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