Inequality, household debt and financial instability: An agent-based perspective
Authored by Alberto Cardaci
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.jebo.2018.01.010
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Abstract
Our paper contributes to the literature on the causes of the 2007-2008
financial crisis in the United States. By means of an agent-based model,
we replicate an artificial credit network economy in order to assess the
impact of growing income inequality in the presence of peer effects and
home equity borrowing. We show that the resulting debt-financed
consumption boom jeopardises the stability of the economic system, thus
paving the way for a financial crisis. Our model includes a behavioural
rule for consumption based on expenditure cascades, a hierarchical
structure of household finance, an articulated credit market with
collateralised consumption loans and mortgages and a simple housing
market. Results show that the model is able to capture the economic and
social pressure of inequality on low and middle income households that
pushes them to increase their consumption via home equity extraction.
Rising non-performing loans lead to higher bad debt on the banks'
balance sheets and, consequently, to the emergence of a crisis as an
endogenous dynamic. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Agent-based models
Leverage
Inequality
Model
Financial crises
Credit
Income-distribution
Cycles
Prices
Demand
Crisis
Housing-market
Accelerator
Equity extraction
Household debt