Skip to Main Content
Seminar

Alexandros Fakos Assistant professor at the School of Business at ITAM

Apr 9, 2024 • 1:00 pm - 2:30 pm

Room 2102


This event has ended. Please see our upcoming events page for more events.

Registration Closed
Pictured: Mexico's Autonomous Institute of Technology

Pictured: Mexico's Autonomous Institute of Technology

Alex Fakos Assistant professor at the School of Business at ITAM
PhD in Economics from the Pennsylvania State University. Research focus: financial capital structure and macroeconomics of productivity.

"Financial Frictions, Capital Structure, and Aggregate Productivity"


Abstract: I develop a general equilibrium model of heterogeneous firms to study the importance of financial frictions on aggregate productivity. Frictions lead to lower aggregate productivity by inducing suboptimal firm capital structure and leading to misallocation of capital and labor across firms. Financial frictions are the only cause of suboptimal capital structure by driving a wedge between the price of debt and equity. Yet, they are one of the possible sources of the marginal revenue product of capital (MRPK) dispersion that leads to the misallocation of real resources. Model estimates from European public firms imply that suboptimal capital structure leads to a 2% loss in aggregate productivity, which is a lower bound on the importance of financial frictions and represents 1/10 of the total loss from all frictions. The quantities of interest are precisely estimated, and I obtain their standard errors using the influence function approach, which provides a general inferential framework for multi-step estimators of structural models in finance. 

Link to paper: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4728019


Bio: Alex is an assistant professor at ITAM since 2015 where he teaches courses on business strategy. He has a bachelor’s and a master's degree from Athens University of Economics and Business in Greece and a PhD in Economics from the Pennsylvania State University. His research focuses on empirically studying the responses of firms to changes due to government policy or macroeconomic shocks with a particular emphasis on the analysis of firm dynamics.

Link to full Bio.


Details:

Type: In Person
Time: Tuesday April 9, 2024 from 1:00 to 2:30 PM
Location: Room 2102

REGISTRATION CLOSED