posted on 2015-02-12, 10:54authored byWinifred (Shih-Yun) Huang-Meier, Mark Freeman, Khelifa Mazouz
We use two general equilibrium models to explain why changes in the external economic environment result in pro-cyclical aggregate dividend payout behavior. Both models that we consider endogenize low elasticity of investment. The first model incorporates capital adjustment costs, while the second one assumes that risk-averse managers maximize their own objective function rather than
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shareholder wealth. We show that, while both models generate pro-cyclical aggregate dividends, a feature consistent with the observed business-cycle pattern of payouts from well-diversified portfolios, the second model provides a more likely explanation for this effect. Our findings emphasize the importance of incorporating agency conflicts when considering the relationship between the external economic environment and the financial behavior of businesses.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Business
Published in
Journal of Macroeconomics
Volume
Forthcoming
Issue
1
Pages
1 - 10 (10)
Citation
HUANG-MEIER, W., FREEMAN, M. and MAZOUZ, K., 2015. Why are aggregate dividend payments procyclical? Journal of Macroeconomics, 44, pp.98-108.
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