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Economic effects of shutdown?

Economic effects of shutdown?. Which model should we use ?. Financial panics past and present. 1873. The great panics of American history.

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Economic effects of shutdown?

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  1. Economic effects of shutdown? Which model should we use?
  2. Financial panics past and present
  3. 1873 The great panics of American history Speculation in railroads and land was the tech boom-and-bust of the 19th century. Western lands and railroads had a asset price bubble. Then they crashed in 1873 investments. Banks failed because they were heavily exposed in these speculative investments and they had insufficient deposits to cover withdrawals. In 1873, the bank of Jay Cooke and Company collapsed, and in its wake, another 5,000 businesses went under. Lesson 1: Most panics have their roots in bad fundamentals.
  4. 1893 The Panic of 1893 began when rumor spread of the collapse of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. Investors dumped more than 1 million shares of the company in one afternoon. That set off a chain reaction, as people fled from stocks and tried to convert into currency and gold. By the end of 1893, nearly 20,000 businesses had closed their doors, millions were out of work, and armies of unemployed workers had descended on Washington demanding food and aid. Lesson 2: In a precarious situation, a rumor can cause a crisis because of multiple equilibria.
  5. Balance Sheet of Run-Prone Banking: Good equilibrium Assets | Liabilities __________________________________________ | | Bonds 20 | Deposits 90 | Mortgages 80 | Equity 10 | | | | | | | |
  6. Balance Sheet of Run-Prone Banking: After shock and bad equilibrium Assets | Liabilities ________________________________________ | | Bonds 20 | Deposits 90 | Mortgages 80 - 40 | Equity 10 - 40 | | | | | | | | Insolvent
  7. The Great Depression 1929-1933 The Fed went into business in reaction to the Panic of 2007. Even with the Fed at the helm, the Great Depression had a series of bank crises. (More on this next week.) Lesson 3: Having a strong central bank does not prevent bank runs.
  8. Asset bubbles and panics: Lesson 4. Panics and financial crises often follow asset price booms
  9. The Meltdown of 2008 Real housing prices rose 120% from 1995 to 2006. Parties always end. When the housing bubble burst, this revealed trillions of dollars of bad investments held by commercial banks, investment banks, as well as outside the financial system. Investment banks had massive short-run liabilities (repos etc.) and large illiquid assets (such as asset backed securities). When large investors got nervous, they withdrew their funds. Poof, Bear Stearns dissappeared. Poof, Lehman disappeared. By the end of 2008, there were no large independent investment banks left in America. That was the crisis that started the Great Recession. Lesson 5: Financial systems are inherently unstable because banks transform illiquid long-term assets into liquid short-term liabilities.
  10. Lessons from past panics 1. Most panics have their roots in bad fundamentals. 2. In a precarious situation, a rumor can cause a panic because there are multiple equilibria. 3. Having a strong central bank (the Fed) does not prevent bank runs. 4. Panics and financial crises often follow asset price booms. 5. Financial systems are inherently unstable because banks transform illiquid long-term assets into liquid short-term liabilities.
  11. Health of banking system Original good equilibrium T
  12. Health of banking system Housing prices decline (or railroads or land or …) T
  13. Health of banking system Further stresses push system past tipping point, and system rushes to new bad equilibrium T
  14. Health of banking system Even when financial crisis is over, you are stuck in the bad equilibrium (no Bear, no Lehman, Greece default, junk everywhere). System returns to locally stable “bad equilibrium” T
  15. (b) (a) (d) (c)
  16. A small panic model This is the banking equivalent of Romer debt model. Assume that banks start with an initial amount of capital and net worth, W0. They have initial liabilities as deposits or repos, D0 = 1. Their assets are illiquid like houses. When depositors withdraw their deposits, the bank is forced to sell assets in a fire sale, and can realize only a fraction (v) of their value. Therefore, when deposits fall to D, bank net worth is the following: (1) W = W0 – v(1-D) Banks have a survival probability of P, which is a function of their net worth. Generally, banks fail when W < 0. (2) P = g(W) = g(W0 – v(1-D)) = f(D) Finally, depositors run when they think the bank will fail, i.e., the perceived probability of solvency declines. D = h(P), h’(P) < 0. Equations (2) and (3) are the equations of the survival and runs behavior. The solution is (D*, P*). We will see that there are stable and unstable equilibria.
  17. Solvency (P) and deposits (D) 1 P = prob of survival 0 1 D = deposits
  18. The solvency equation 1 P = g(W) = g(W0 – f(1-D)) = f(D) P = prob of survival 0 1 D = deposits
  19. The “runs” equation 1 P = prob of survival D = h(P) 0 1 D = deposits
  20. Three equilibria: two stable, one unstable 1 P = f(D) P = prob of survival D = h(P) 0 1 D = deposits
  21. Three equilibria: two stable, one unstable 1 P = f(D) D = h(P) UNSTABLE REGIME P = prob of survival 0 1 D = deposits
  22. Fear of panic shifts D (deposit function) : single bad equilibrium 1 UNSTABLE REGIME D = h(P) P = prob of survival P = f(D) 0 1 D = deposits
  23. Bad bank investments or depression shift P function: single bad equilibrium 1 UNSTABLE REGIME P = prob of survival P = f(D) D = h(P) 0 1 D = deposits
  24. Remedies for panics and bank runs Governments guarantee small bank deposits (< $100,000). - This stabilizes against panic of “little People.”
  25. Deposit insurance: single good equilibrium 1 P = f(D) P = prob of survival D = h(P) 0 1 D = deposits
  26. Remedies for panics and bank runs Until 2008, governments implicitly protected large commercial banks: An unwritten rule was that they are “too big to fail” (TBTF), i.e., the central bank will prevent their bankruptcy because of systemic risks. In 2008 crisis, the government experimented with allowing a TBTF financial institution to go bankrupt (Lehman), and this caused a system meltdown. Capitalism lasted 36 hours. After the Lehman meltdown, government protected systemically unstable elements (money market mutual funds, large banks, AIG) Dodd-Frank Act (2009) helped fix some of the worst problems, but the inherent instability of the financial system remains. This is a problem that won’t go away…. Stay tuned.
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