
Abstract The effective liquidity supply of the economy—the weighted-sum of all assets that serve as media of exchange—matters for interest rates and unemployment. We formalize this idea by adding an over-the-counter market with collateralized trades to the Mortensen–Pissarides model. An increase in public liquidity through a higher supply of real government bonds raises the real interest rate, crowding out private liquidity and increasing unemployment. If unemployment is inefficiently high, keeping liquidity scarce can be socially optimal. A liquidity crisis affecting the acceptability of private assets as collateral widens the rate-of-return difference between private and public liquidity, also increasing unemployment.
Unemployment; Liquidity; Interest rates, Economics, Applied economics, Interest rates, finance and investment, E50, Economic theory, Decent Work and Economic Growth, Econometrics, Tourism and Services, Economic Theory, Commerce, Banking, Management, D82, D83, Unemployment, Liquidity, Applied Economics, Finance and Investment, E40, jel: jel:E40, jel: jel:D82, jel: jel:D83, jel: jel:E50
Unemployment; Liquidity; Interest rates, Economics, Applied economics, Interest rates, finance and investment, E50, Economic theory, Decent Work and Economic Growth, Econometrics, Tourism and Services, Economic Theory, Commerce, Banking, Management, D82, D83, Unemployment, Liquidity, Applied Economics, Finance and Investment, E40, jel: jel:E40, jel: jel:D82, jel: jel:D83, jel: jel:E50
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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