We develop a theory of endogenous uncertainty where the ability of investors to learn about firm-level fundamentals declines during financial crises. At the same time, higher uncertainty reinforces financial distress of firms, giving rise to "belief traps" - a persistent cycle of uncertainty, pessimistic expectations, and financial constraints, through which a temporary shortage of funds can develop into a long-lasting funding problem for firms. At the macro-level, belief traps can explain why financial crises can result in long-lasting recessions. In our model, financial crises are characterized by high levels of credit misallocation, an increased cross-sectional dispersion of growth rates, endogenously increased pessimism, uncertainty and disagreement among investors, highly volatile asset prices, and high risk premia. A calibration of our model to U.S. micro data on investor beliefs explains a considerable fraction of the slow recovery after the 08/09 crisis.
The ADEMU Working Paper Series is being supported by the European Commission Horizon 2020 European Union funding for Research & Innovation, grant agreement No 649396.
Working paper
English
Belief traps; Credit crunches; Dispersed information; Endogenous uncertainty; Internal persistence of financial shocks; Resource misallocation
European Commission 649396
Barcelona Graduate School of Economics. ADEMU working paper series ;
open access
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