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Rare Disasters and Asset Markets in the Twentieth Century

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2006

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MIT Press
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Barro, Robert J. 2006. Rare disasters and asset markets in the twentieth century. The Quarter Journal of Economics 121, no. 3: 823-866.

Abstract

The potential for rare economic disasters explains a lot of asset-pricing puzzles. I calibrate disaster probabilities from the twentieth century global history, especially the sharp contractions associated with World War I, the Great Depression, and World War II. The puzzles that can be explained include the high equity premium, low risk-free rate, and volatile stock returns. Another mystery that may be resolved is why expected real interest rates were low in the United States during major wars, such as World War II. The model, an extension of work by Rietz, maintains the tractable framework of a representative agent, time-additive and isoelastic preferences, and complete markets. The results hold with i.i.d. shocks to productivity growth in a Lucas-tree type economy and also with the inclusion of capital formation.

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Rare Disasters and Asset Markets in… : DASH Story 2021-05-14
Just a bunch of good lads. I am an Oxford university student studying economics so I do have free access, but I just wanted to say bunch of good lads. The positive externalities of academia are far more significant if it is open source and available to all.