The Inefficient Markets Hypothesis: Why Financial Markets Do Not Work Well in the Real World
Author(s) -
Roger E. A. Farmer,
Carine Nourry,
Alain Venditti
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ern: other microeconomics: general equilibrium and disequilibrium models of financial markets (topic)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w18647
Subject(s) - financial market , work (physics) , business , economics , financial system , monetary economics , finance , engineering , mechanical engineering
Existing literature continues to be unable to offer a convincing explanation for the volatility of the stochastic discount factor in real world data. Our work provides such an explanation. We do not rely on frictions, market incompleteness or transactions costs of any kind. Instead, we modify a simple stochastic representative agent model by allowing for birth and death and by allowing for heterogeneity in agents' discount factors. We show that these two minor and realistic changes to the timeless Arrow-Debreu paradigm are sufficient to invalidate the implication that competitive financial markets efficiently allocate risk. Our work demonstrates that financial markets, by their very nature, cannot be Pareto efficient, except by chance. Although individuals in our model are rational; markets are not.
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