7. Nonverifiable Income Flashcards

1
Q

What do we aim to look at with nonverifiable income and what do we find?

A

We ask if it’s possible to have any loan agreements when the lenders are completely unable to verify project returns. We find that it might be possible to find solutions to the incentive problem as long as we extend the time horizon of projects. We also find that the problem has interesting applications for intermediate finance and sovereign debt

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2
Q

Summarise the model

A

-Date 1: investment I yields R1 with prob p and 0 with prob 1-p
-Date 2: the initial investment if not terminated yields expected income R2. If the project is liquidated at the end of date 1, lenders receive liquidation value L<I-A and the entrepreneur receives nothing

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3
Q

Remark 1 distribution of R2

A

Given that 0 is part of the distribution of R2 the entrepreneur repays nothing at date 2 since they claim they made 0

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4
Q

What do we assume about liquidation level?

A

Insufficient liquidation L<R2. The continuation value of the project is higher than its liquidation value

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5
Q

How is the contract modelled?

A

Repayment D<=R1; probability of continuation yo distributed [0,1] if D is not repaid; probability of continuation y1 distributed [0,1] if D is repaid

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6
Q

What does the incentive compatibility constraint require?

A

R1-D + y1R2>= R1 + yoR2
(y1-yo)R2>=D

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7
Q

What is the objective function?

A

P(R1-D+y1R2)+(1-p)(yoR2)

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8
Q

What is the incentive compatibility constraint?

A

(y1-yo)R2>=D

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9
Q

What is the zero profitability constraint?

A

P(D+(1-y1)L)+ (1-p)(1-yo)L>=I-A

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10
Q

Why do we assume the constraint D<=R1 isn’t binding?

A

If it was there would be no mechanism that could solve the incentive problem

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11
Q

Proposition 1 what does the optimal contract specify?

A

y1=1
1-yo= (I-A)/(pR2+(1-p)L and D=(1-yo)R2

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12
Q

In what cases does the stochastic contract dominate a deterministic one?

A

The optimal stochastic contract will dominate a deterministic contract where the project is always terminated when there is no repayment

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13
Q

How should the lender set the probability of termination 1-yo?

A

As long as the lender breaks even in expectation it is always better to set the probability of termination as low as possible given the liquidation is inefficient

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14
Q

Why is the zero profit incentive binding?

A

If not D could be lowered without effecting the two constraints

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15
Q

Why does the lender sometimes allow the project to continue under the optimal mechanism even when the borrower makes no repayment?

A

Stochastic contract. The lender tries to maximise the borrowers utility. Given continuation is always better than liquidation, the lender tries to maximise the probability that the project continues

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16
Q

Suppose that L>R2. How would this change the results?

A

The project would always be liquidated because there is no reason to continue

17
Q

How would extra periods affect the results?

A

The borrower has a bit more leverage and constraints are relaxed

18
Q

What is the relationship between yo and R2?

A

If R2 is extremely high the borrower won’t want to risk giving it up so even with a very high yo the borrower will still pay the debt. Therefore yo and R2 are positively related