Abstract

This study aims to connect two strands of the psychology and economics literature, i.e., behavioural finance and agent-based macroeconomics, to assess the impact of managerial overconfidence at the micro and macro levels of the economy as a whole. We build a macroeconomic stock-flow consistent agent-based model that is calibrated for the specific case of Poland to explore whether the overconfidence of top corporate managers in the context of their initial capital structure decisions is detrimental for the firms being managed in this way, the financial market dynamics, and the selected macroeconomic indicators. We model heterogeneous firms with different capital structure decision criteria depending on their degree of managerial overconfidence. Our model also includes a complete macroeconomic closure with aggregated households, capital producers, banking, and a public sector. We find that firms with overconfident managers outperform in terms of investment and size but are also more fragile, thereby making them more likely to default. Finally, we run policy shocks and show that while investors' flight to liquidity creates financial turmoil and increases the probability of default. This paper contributes to the knowledge base by linking behavioural corporate finance and agent-based macroeconomics. In general, the excess overconfidence on the micro level, either an increase in the proportion of overconfident firms or a higher degree of overconfidence among managers, has a strong destabilizing impact on the economy as a whole on the macro level.

Highlights

  • Since the beginning, behavioural finance proponents have been greatly inspired by psychology in creating a real picture of investors and of the stock market as a whole (e.g. [1,2,3])

  • We find that firms with overconfident managers outperform in terms of investment and size but are more fragile, thereby making them more likely to default

  • This paper contributes to the knowledge base by linking behavioural corporate finance and agent-based macroeconomics

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Summary

Method

We build a macroeconomic stock-flow consistent agent-based model that is calibrated for the specific case of Poland to explore whether the overconfidence of top corporate managers in the context of their initial capital structure decisions is detrimental for the firms being managed in this way, the financial market dynamics, and the selected macroeconomic indicators. We model heterogeneous firms with different capital structure decision criteria depending on their degree of managerial overconfidence. Our model includes a complete macroeconomic closure with aggregated households, capital producers, banking, and a public sector

Results
Conclusions
Introduction
Current study
Structure of the model
Accounting structure
Period structure
Production and price
Expectations and investment
Capital structure
Demand distribution
Firms’ default
Capital producers
Households
Government
Baseline results
Validation
Baseline analysis
Sensitivity analysis
Policy shocks
Run to liquidity
Monetary policy tightening
More liquidity for firms
Conclusion

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