Modern macro-financial crises are triggered by diverse events—wars, commodity shocks, policy reversals, housing busts, liquidity runs—yet their macro-financial morphology is strikingly repetitive: leverage drifts upward in expansions, vulnerabilities accumulate, and a tightening shock produces nonlinear contraction and crisis-style clearing. This paper isolates a slow-moving upstream state variable that helps explain this repetition: the Securities-Market Value Participation Gap (the Participation Gap). In securities-market-dominated economies, economic activity and trading profits are capitalized into an expanding layer of market value. If broad households are structurally confined to current-period settlement while capitalized upside accrues disproportionately to capital owners, the economy’s high-marginal-propensity-to-consume sector absorbs less of the capitalization layer. Aggregate demand becomes structurally more reliant on credit bridging—credit expansion and balance-sheet growth that pull future resources into present clearing. Credit bridging stabilizes transactions in the short run but increases leverage drift and tail sensitivity, thickening the left tail and amplifying crisis vulnerability. The mechanism yields three testable predictions: (P1) the Participation Gap predicts stronger credit bridging and leverage drift; (P2) the Participation Gap amplifies the real effects of tightening shocks; and (P3) the Participation Gap thickens both market and macro tails and raises crisis probability. We implement implication tests using harmonized micro-wealth surveys matched to macro-financial panels, reinforce the evidence with cross-measure validation and extensive robustness, and evaluate rolling/expanding-window out-of-sample early-warning performance against canonical baselines under conservative real-time information constraints. The results suggest that monitoring and policy should treat participation-layer distortions as a distinct upstream object alongside credit aggregates in macro-prudential frameworks.
Topo Labs CY (Sun,) studied this question.