Published June 2019 | Version v1
Dissertation Open

The Risk of Risk-Sharing: Diversification and Boom-Bust Cycles

  • 1. University of Chicago

Contributors

Description

In this dissertation, I model a shock whereby financial intermediaries can better diversify borrowers' idiosyncratic risks. A sector-specific diversification improvement induces intermediaries to reallocate funds toward the shocked sector. As lending spreads fall, intermediaries build up leverage over time. The result is a fragile sectoral boom that can end in an economy-wide bust. This cycle is amplified if the diversification-shocked sector is higher-risk or more external-finance dependent. I apply the model quantitatively to the recent housing cycle. Feeding in a novel mortgage diversification index, the model generates the measured increase in household credit coincident with a 1-2% decline in mortgage spreads. In the subsequent bust, spreads in all sectors spike by 2% as aggregate output drops.

Files

Khorrami_uchicago_0330D_14735.pdf

Files (3.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:006a393c1713aadb2848dcaf4502859b
3.4 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:1813

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Booth School of Business, Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics, Booth School of Business Dissertations