Paradoxically, high-growth, high-investment developing countries tend to experience capital outflows. This paper shows that this allocation puzzle can be explained simply by introducing uninsurable idiosyncratic investment risk in the neoclassical growth model with international trade in bonds, and by taking into account not only TFP catch-up, but also the capital wedge, that is, the distortions on the return to capital. The model fits the two following facts, documented on a sample of 67 countries between 1980 and 2003: (i) TFP growth is positively correlated with capital outflows in a sample including creditor countries; (ii) the long-run level of capital per efficient unit of labor is positively correlated with capital outflows. Consiste...
This paper investigates international capital flows to developing countries for the period 1970-2006...
We examine the empirical role of different explanations for the lack of flows of capital from rich t...
We show that across developing countries, external debt to private creditors rises more than proport...
Paradoxically, high-growth, high-investment developing countries tend to experience capital outflows...
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth shoul...
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth shoul...
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth shoul...
This paper shows that in a stylized model with two countries, characterized by different levels of f...
Capital flows to developing countries are small and are mostly take the form of loans rather than di...
Why doesn't capital flow to developing countries as predicted by the neoclassical model? What are th...
We establish one non-linear pattern of international capital flows by building up one two-country OL...
Recent evidence from developing and emerging economies shows a negative correlation between growth a...
On one small open OLG economy, the productivity growth determines both the in- vestment through marg...
Financial capital and \u85xed capital tend to ow in opposite directions between poor and rich countr...
The two-way capital flows has been a persistent pattern existing in international capital market, i....
This paper investigates international capital flows to developing countries for the period 1970-2006...
We examine the empirical role of different explanations for the lack of flows of capital from rich t...
We show that across developing countries, external debt to private creditors rises more than proport...
Paradoxically, high-growth, high-investment developing countries tend to experience capital outflows...
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth shoul...
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth shoul...
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth shoul...
This paper shows that in a stylized model with two countries, characterized by different levels of f...
Capital flows to developing countries are small and are mostly take the form of loans rather than di...
Why doesn't capital flow to developing countries as predicted by the neoclassical model? What are th...
We establish one non-linear pattern of international capital flows by building up one two-country OL...
Recent evidence from developing and emerging economies shows a negative correlation between growth a...
On one small open OLG economy, the productivity growth determines both the in- vestment through marg...
Financial capital and \u85xed capital tend to ow in opposite directions between poor and rich countr...
The two-way capital flows has been a persistent pattern existing in international capital market, i....
This paper investigates international capital flows to developing countries for the period 1970-2006...
We examine the empirical role of different explanations for the lack of flows of capital from rich t...
We show that across developing countries, external debt to private creditors rises more than proport...