We investigate the quantitative behavior of business-cycle models in which the
intermediation process acts either as a source of fluctuations or as a
propagator of real shocks. In neither case do we find convincing evidence that
the intermediation process is an important element of aggregate fluctuations.
For an economy driven by intermediation shocks, consumption is not smoother than
output, investment is negatively correlated with output, variations in the
capital stock are quite large, and interest rates are procyclical. The model
economy thus fails to match unconditional moments for the U.S. economy. We also
structurally estimate parameters of a model economy in which intermediation and
productivity shocks are present, allowing for the intermediation process to
propagate the real shock. The unconditional correlations are closer to those
observed only when the intermediation shock is relatively
unimportant.