The source of market incompleteness in the economy is private information: a household’s idiosyncratic productivity shock is not observable by others. Risk-sharing between households occurs through long-term contracts with intermediaries. The authors find that incomplete risk-sharing tends to reduce the rate of growth relative to the complete risk-sharing benchmark. Numerical examples indicate that the welfare cost and the growth effect of private information are small.
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Growth and Risk-Sharing with Private Information
September 1999
WP 99-12 – The authors examine the impact of incomplete risk-sharing on growth and welfare.