skip to main content
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Careers
Publications Catalog
News & Events
Banking Markets Research Education Regional Outreach About the Fed
 

 
 
Staff Reports
Liquidity-Saving Mechanisms
April 2007  Number 282
Revised January 2008
JEL classification: E42, E58, G21
 

Authors: Antoine Martin and James McAndrews

We study the incentives of participants in a real-time gross settlement system with and without the addition of a liquidity-saving mechanism (queue). Participants in our model face a liquidity shock and different costs for delaying payments. They trade off the cost of delaying a payment against the cost of borrowing liquidity from the central bank. The heterogeneity of participants in our model gives rise to a rich set of strategic interactions. The main contribution of our paper is to show that the design of a liquidity-saving mechanism has important implications for welfare, even in the absence of netting. In particular, we find that parameters will determine whether the addition of a liquidity-saving mechanism increases or decreases welfare.

 
Available only in PDFPDF51 pages / 262 kb