TY - JOUR
T1 - Contractual structure and wealth accumulation
AU - Mookherjee, Dilip
AU - Ray, Debraj
PY - 2002/9
Y1 - 2002/9
N2 - Can historical wealth distributions affect long-run output and inequality despite "rational" saving, convex technology and no externalities? We consider a model of equilibrium short-period financial contracts, where poor agents face credit constraints owing to moral hazard and limited liability. If agents have no bargaining power, poor agents have no incentive to save: poverty traps emerge and agents are polarized into two classes, with no interclass mobility. If instead agents have all the bargaining power, strong saving incentives are generated: the wealth of poor and rich agents alike drift upward indefinitely and "history" does not matter eventually. (D31, D91, 132, O17, Q15).
AB - Can historical wealth distributions affect long-run output and inequality despite "rational" saving, convex technology and no externalities? We consider a model of equilibrium short-period financial contracts, where poor agents face credit constraints owing to moral hazard and limited liability. If agents have no bargaining power, poor agents have no incentive to save: poverty traps emerge and agents are polarized into two classes, with no interclass mobility. If instead agents have all the bargaining power, strong saving incentives are generated: the wealth of poor and rich agents alike drift upward indefinitely and "history" does not matter eventually. (D31, D91, 132, O17, Q15).
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U2 - 10.1257/00028280260344489
DO - 10.1257/00028280260344489
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0038398282
SN - 0002-8282
VL - 92
SP - 818
EP - 849
JO - American Economic Review
JF - American Economic Review
IS - 4
ER -