Abstract
Using novel measures of information acquisition, we document causal evidence of a feedback loop between firms' credit access and information acquisition. To examine the macroeconomic implications of this feedback loop, we develop a tractable general equilibrium framework with financial frictions and endogenous information acquisition. In line with the empirical evidence, the model predicts that a rise in information costs raises the level of uncertainty and reduces a firm's equity value, hampering its credit access. On the other hand, tightened credit constraints restrain activity of high-productivity firms, leading to misallocation that reduces aggregate productivity and firm profits, and discouraging information acquisition. This feedback loop creates a finance-uncertainty trap that substantially amplifies and prolongs business cycle fluctuations.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publisher | SSRN |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | In preparation - 5 Jul 2025 |
User-Defined Keywords
- endogenous uncertainty
- information frictions
- financial frictions
- misallocation
- business cycles