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Illiquid Lemon Markets and the Macroeconomy

Aimé Bierdel1,2,3,4,5; Andres Drenik1,2,3,4,5; Juan Herreño; Pablo Ottonello1,2,3,4,5

1 National Bureau of Economic Research · 2 University of California San Diego · 3 University of Maryland, College Park · 4 Columbia University · 5 The University of Texas at Austin

Journal of Political Economy 2026 open access

We study the macroeconomic implications of asymmetric information in capital markets.We build a quantitative capital-accumulation model in which capital is traded in illiquid markets, with sellers having more information about capital quality than buyers.Asymmetric information distorts the terms of trade for sellers of high-quality capital, who list higher prices and are willing to accept lower trading probabilities to signal their type.Led by the model's predictions, we measure the distortions from asymmetric information by studying the relationship between listed prices and trading probabilities in a unique dataset of individual capital units listed for trade.By combining the empirical measurement with the model, we show that information asymmetries can play a quantitatively large role during economic crises when the degree of asymmetric information deteriorates.

DOI
10.1086/742435
Language
en
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