Inflation illusion, credit, and asset pricing
Inflation illusion, credit, and asset pricing
Rate this book:
About This Book
"This paper considers asset pricing in a general equilibrium model in which some, but not all, agents suffer from inflation illusion. Illusionary investors mistake changes in nominal interest rates for changes in real rates, while smart investors understand the Fisher equation. The presence of smart investors ensures that the equilibrium nominal interest rate moves with expected inflation. The model also predicts a nonmonotonic relationship between the price-to-rent ratio on housing and nominal interest rates -- housing booms occur both when the nominal rate is especially low and when it is especially high. In either situation, disagreement about real interest rates between smart and illusionary investors stimulates borrowing and lending and drives up the price of collateral. The resulting housing boom is stronger if credit markets are more developed. We document that many countries experienced a housing boom in the high-inflation 1970s and a second, stronger, boom in the low-inflation 2000s"--National Bureau of Economic Research 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 Monika Piazzesi
Advances in Economics and Econ
Advances in Economics and Econometrics 2 Hardback Volume Set
Advances in Economics and Econ
Advances in Economics and Econometrics 2 Paperback Volume Set
An econometric model of the yi
An econometric model of the yield curve with macroeconomic jump effects
Bond positions, expectations,
Bond positions, expectations, and the yield curve
Equilibrium yield curves
Equilibrium yield curves
Futures prices as risk-adjuste
Futures prices as risk-adjusted forecasts of monetary policy