posted on 2001-07-01, 00:00authored byEva Carceles Poveda, Daniele Coen-Pirani
Many recent papers in macroeconomics have studied the implications of models with household heterogeneity and incomplete financial markets under
the assumption that households own the stock of physical capital and undertake the
intertemporal investment decisions. In these models, production exhibits constant returns to scale, households maximize expected discounted utility, and firms rent capital
and labor from households to maximize period by period profits. This paper considers
the case in which infinitely lived firms, rather than households, make the intertemporal
investment decisions. Under this assumption, it shows that there exists an objective
function for firms that results in the same equilibrium allocation as in the standard setting with one period lived firms. The objective requires that firms maximize their asset
value, which is defined as the discounted value of future cash flows using present value
processes that do not allow for arbitrage opportunities.