Guarantees, risk shifting and credit crunches

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Resumen

This paper analyzes the role of guarantees when a policymaker wants to avoid a credit crunch, but at the same time is concerned that its policies may lead to excessive risk taking. Banks face a coordination problem in their investment decisions and are allowed to risk-shift to projects with smaller expected return and higher volatility. Government guarantees can avoid a freeze in funding at the cost of increasing risk-shifting behavior. When fundamentals are sufficiently low, the policymaker prefers not to intervene and a credit crunch happens. The moral hazard problem makes guarantees more powerful, reducing the amount of guarantees needed to avoid a coordination failure.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo107615
PublicaciónJournal of Banking and Finance
Volumen184
DOI
EstadoPublicada - ene. 2026

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© 2026 Elsevier B.V.

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