This paper develops a tractable general equilibrium with endogenous firm capital structure decisions driven by changes in economic uncertainty. The model enables a critical assessment of standard paradigms of corporate finance in order to highlight empirically important directions for improvement, and help understand potential real effects. The standard trade-off version of the model implies that debt incentives contract with risk. Yet, surprisingly, aggregate and firm-level evidence shows that leverage increases with uncertainty. This effect is driven by debt quantities, and is not due to the leverage denominator. It is also not explained by precautionary cash hoarding, binding restructuring constraints, or capital supply frictions. The analysis thus points towards alternative formulations in which debt incentives increase with risk. A version of the model with moral hazard via default insurance can account for the joint dynamics of uncertainty, credit spreads, and debt. In this version, unlike the trade-off case, the real effects of debt can become severely negative.
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21 February 2022
Research Article|
February 21 2022
Economic Uncertainty, Aggregate Debt, and the Real Effects of Corporate Finance Available to Purchase
Timothy C. Johnson
Timothy C. Johnson
University of Illinois
, Urbana-Champaign
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I am grateful to Ivo Welch and two anonymous referees as well as to Heitor Almeida, Dirk Hackbarth, Jaehoon Lee, Michi Nishihara, George Pennacchi, and Adriano Rampini for helpful comments. I also thank seminar participants at UIUC, the Auckland Finance Meetings, Texas A&M, and McGill University. Chelsea Yu provided excellent research assistance.
Online ISSN: 2164-5760
Print ISSN: 2164-5744
© 2022 Timothy C. Johnson
2022
Timothy C. Johnson
Licensed re-use rights only
Critical Finance Review (2022) 11 (1): 79–116.
Citation
C. Johnson T (2022), "Economic Uncertainty, Aggregate Debt, and the Real Effects of Corporate Finance". Critical Finance Review, Vol. 11 No. 1 pp. 79–116, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/104.00000068
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