Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Aggregate productivity falls in recessions and rises in expansions. Several empirical studies suggest that the systematic behavior of lending standards, with laxer (tighter) standards applied during expansions (recessions), is responsible for reverting trends in aggregate productivity. We build a dynamic model that rationalizes these findings. Adverse selection in credit markets emerges as a potential source of macroeconomic instability. The key idea modeled is that in order to effectively signal their type to financiers, productive entrepreneurs must suffer a cost. The effective cost of signaling rises with higher cash flow brought about by stronger economic fundamentals, because higher cash flow makes it easier for the unproductive type to mimic the productive type. Competition among the financiers then results in suboptimally lax lending standards. Low productivity entrepreneurs obtain financing, the producer composition effect inducing a recession. This, in turn, creates conditions – weak economic fundamentals and low cash flow – conducive to the emergence of tighter lending terms, the strong composition effect leading to an economic recovery.