The economics of money, banking, and financial institutions 2nd ch08

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The economics of money, banking, and financial institutions 2nd ch08

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Chapter An Economic  Analysis of Financial  Structure © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc Sources of External Finance in Canada © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-2 Sources of Foreign External Finance © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-3 Puzzles of Financial Structure Stocks are not most important source of external finance for  businesses Issuing marketable securities not primary funding source for  businesses Indirect finance (financial intermediation) is far more important than  direct finance Banks are most important source of external finance Financial system is among most heavily regulated sectors of economy Only large, well established firms have access to securities markets Collateral is prevalent feature of debt contracts Debt contracts are typically extremely complicated legal documents  with restrictive covenants © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-4 Transaction Costs and Financial Structure Transaction costs hinder flow of funds to people  with productive investment opportunities Financial intermediaries make profits by  reducing transaction costs Take advantage of economies of scale Example: Mutual Funds Develop expertise to lower transaction costs Explains Puzzle 3 © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-5 Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard: Definitions Adverse Selection: Before transaction occurs Potential borrowers most likely to produce adverse  outcomes are ones most likely to seek loans and be selected Moral Hazard: After transaction occurs Hazard that borrower has incentives to engage in  undesirable (immoral) activities making it more likely that  won’t pay loan back © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-6 Adverse Selection and Financial Structure Lemons Problem in Securities Markets If can’t distinguish between good and bad securities, willing  to pay only average of good and bad securities’ values Result: Good securities undervalued and firms won’t issue  them; bad securities overvalued, so too many issued Investors won’t want to buy bad securities, so market won’t  function well Explains Puzzle 2 and Puzzle 1 Also explains Puzzle 6: Less asymmetric information for  well known firms, so smaller lemons problem © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-7 Tools to Help Solve Adverse Selection (Lemons) Problem Private Production and Sale of Information Free­rider problem interferes with this solution Government Regulation to Increase Information Explains Puzzle 5 Financial Intermediation A Analogy to solution to lemons problem provided by used­car  dealers B Avoid free­rider problem by making private loans Explains Puzzles 3 and 4 Collateral and Net Worth Explains Puzzle 7 © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-8 Moral Hazard: Debt versus Equity Moral Hazard in Equity: Principal­Agent Problem Result of separation of ownership by stockholders (principals) from  control by managers (agents) Managers act in own rather than stockholders’ interest Tools to Help Solve the Principal­Agent Problem Monitoring: production of information Government regulation to increase information Financial intermediation Debt contracts Explains Puzzle 1: Why debt used more than equity © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-9 Moral Hazard and Debt Markets Moral hazard: borrower wants to take on too much risk Tools to Help Solve Moral Hazard Net worth Monitoring and enforcement of restrictive  covenants Financial intermediation Banks and other intermediaries have special  advantages in monitoring Explains Puzzles 1–4 © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-10 Summary: Asymmetric Information Problems and Tools to Solve Them © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-11 Financial Development and Economic Growth Financial Repression Leads to Low Growth:  Why? 1. Poor legal system 2. Weak accounting standards 3. Government directs credit 4. Financial institutions nationalized 5. Inadequate government regulation © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-12 Financial Crises Factors Causing Financial Crises 1. Increase in interest rates 2. Increases in uncertainty 3. Asset market effects on balance sheets Stock market effects on net worth Unanticipated deflation Cash flow effects 4. Bank panics Government fiscal imbalances © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-13 Events in Financial Crises in Canada © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-14 Events in Mexican, East Asian, and Argentine Financial Crises © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc 8-15 ... 8-11 Financial Development and Economic Growth Financial Repression Leads to Low Growth:  Why? 1. Poor legal system 2. Weak accounting standards 3. Government directs credit 4. Financial institutions nationalized... 8-6 Adverse Selection and Financial Structure Lemons Problem in Securities Markets If can’t distinguish between good and bad securities, willing  to pay only average of good and bad securities’ values... 8-4 Transaction Costs and Financial Structure Transaction costs hinder flow of funds to people  with productive investment opportunities Financial intermediaries make profits by  reducing transaction costs

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Mục lục

    Sources of External Finance in Canada

    Sources of Foreign External Finance

    Puzzles of Financial Structure

    Transaction Costs and Financial Structure

    Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard: Definitions

    Adverse Selection and Financial Structure

    Tools to Help Solve Adverse Selection (Lemons) Problem

    Moral Hazard: Debt versus Equity

    Moral Hazard and Debt Markets

    Summary: Asymmetric Information Problems and Tools to Solve Them

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