cover image: Aggregate Demand Externality and Self-Fulfilling Default Cycles

20.500.12592/pnvx5v0

Aggregate Demand Externality and Self-Fulfilling Default Cycles

27 Mar 2024

We develop a model of self-fulfilling default cycles with demand externality a la Dixit- Stiglitz to explain the recurrent clustered defaults observed in the data. The literature reports that observable fundamental factors alone are insufficient to explain the cluster. A decline in aggregate output reduces the value of firms and increases their probability of default. As defaults take more firms out of production, aggregate output declines further, creating a positive feedback loop that generates multiple equilibria and self-fulfilling default cycles. Our global analysis using Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation reveals the existence of multiple or even infinite paths that satisfy all equilibrium conditions. Moreover, a family of periodic orbits can emerge in the perfect foresight equilibrium. Our model is consistent with the view that business cycles arise largely because the economy’s internal forces tend to endogenously generate cyclical mechanisms (Beaudry et al., 2020).
business cycles macroeconomics financial economics economic fluctuations and growth portfolio selection and asset pricing consumption and investment money and interest rates

Authors

Jess Benhabib, Feng Dong, Pengfei Wang, Zhenyang Xu

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
Feng Dong acknowledges the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (72250064, 72122011) and Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program (2023THZWJC03). Pengfei Wang acknowledges the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (72150003, 72125007). The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Pengfei Wang I (Pengfei Wang) have read the NBER disclosure policy and attest that the acknowledgements and my supplemental disclosure statement together disclose all sources of funding and all material and relevant financial relationships.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32291
Published in
United States of America

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