Average debt and equity returns
Average debt and equity returns
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Mehra and Prescott (1985) found the difference between average equity and debt returns puzzling because it was too large to be a premium for bearing nondiversifiable aggregate risk. Here, we re-examine this puzzle, taking into account some factors ignored by Mehra and Prescott--taxes, regulatory constraints, and diversification costs--and focusing on long-term rather than short-term savings instruments. Accounting for these factors, we find the difference between average equity and debt returns during peacetime in the last century is less than 1 percent, with the average real equity return somewhat under 5 percent, and the average real debt return almost 4 percent. As theory predicts, the real return on debt has been close to the 4 percent average after-tax real return on capital. Similarly, as theory predicts, the real return on equity is equal to the after-tax real return on capital plus a modest premium for bearing nondiversifiable aggregate risk"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Ellen R. McGrattan
Capital taxation during the U.
Capital taxation during the U.S. Great Depression
Comment on Gali and Rabanal's
Comment on Gali and Rabanal's "technology shocks and aggregate fluctuations; how well does the RBC model fit postwar U.S. data?"
Comment on Mendoza and Tesar's
Comment on Mendoza and Tesar's "why hasn't tax competition triggered a race to the bottom? Some quantitative lessons from the EU"
Does neoclassical theory accou
Does neoclassical theory account for the effects of big fiscal shocks?
Is the stock market overvalued
Is the stock market overvalued?
Measurement with minimal theor
Measurement with minimal theory