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2 - Credit, money and consumption: time-series evidence for Italy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 March 2010

Vittorio Conti
Affiliation:
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano
Rony Hamaui
Affiliation:
Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi, Milan
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Summary

Introduction

The main goal of this chapter is to study the implications of intertemporal maximising behaviour for consumption and interest rates in a world where credit markets are imperfect, and to provide some evidence from Italian macroeconomic time series. This is done by generalising the standard Euler equation approach of Hansen and Singleton (1982) to allow for the possibility of net wealth constraints and liquidity services provided by some of the assets available to the representative consumer.

When financial markets are perfect and agents are risk neutral expected rates of return should be equalised. Even if agents are risk averse, assets with similar risk should produce equal expected returns. Thus, if we consider two assets which are affected only by inflation risk we would expect identical returns. An example would be interest-bearing deposits and short-term bonds, as long as the risk of default by both the bank and the company issuing bonds was negligible. Yet, inspection of time-series returns on such assets reveals that bonds stochastically dominate deposits.

The simplest explanation for the (first order) stochastic dominance of short-term bonds over deposits is provided by the existence of transaction costs on the goods market. If goods can be purchased only with money, monetary assets provide liquidity services which are valuable to the consumer. In the extreme case where ‘cash in advance’ is required, the intertemporal optimisation problem facing individual consumers includes an additional inequality constraint (Lucas, 1982; Svensson, 1985).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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