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要 旨
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This paper develops an endogenous growth model featuring income-dependent
risk preferences to explain the emergence and evolution of buyout funds. We
propose a novel preference structure where high-income agents derive utility
from the thrill of entrepreneurial risk-taking, leading them to acquire business
ideas from capital-constrained innovators. The model demonstrates that buyout
funds emerge as equilibrium contracts when income inequality exceeds a critical
threshold, with wealthy investors paying premiums to participate in ventures.
Conversely, in more equal economies, buyout funds serve as transitional institutions.
Initial inequality enables the acquisition of ideas, but subsequent growth
allows the original idea holders to become independent entrepreneurs, leading to
the fund’s eventual decline. Our framework provides microfoundations for understanding
how income distribution shapes financial intermediation patterns and
their growth consequences, offering new insights into the relationship between
inequality, entrepreneurial spawning, and innovation-driven growth.
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