Financial Development, Technological Change in Emerging Countries and Global Imbalances

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_3908693D1D96
Type
Report: a report published by a school or other institution, usually numbered within a series.
Publication sub-type
Working paper: Working papers contain results presented by the author. Working papers aim to stimulate discussions between scientists with interested parties, they can also be the basis to publish articles in specialized journals
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Financial Development, Technological Change in Emerging Countries and Global Imbalances
Author(s)
Benhima K.
Institution details
Université de Lausanne - HEC - DEEP
Issued date
10/2010
Number
10.10
Genre
Cahiers de recherches économiques
Language
english
Number of pages
50
Abstract
The paper shows that in a general equilibrium model with two countries, characterized by different levels of financial development, and two technologies, one more productive and more financially demanding than the other, the following stylized facts can be replicated: 1) the persistent US current account deficits since the beginning of the 90's; 2) growth of output per worker in developing countries in relative terms with the US during the same period; 3) relative capital accumulation and 4) TFP growth in these countries, also relative to the US. The more productive technology takes more time to implement and is subject to liquidity shocks, while the less productive one, along with external bond assets, can be used as a hoard to finance those liquidity shocks. As a result, after financial globalization, if the emerging economy is capital scarce and if its financial market is sufficiently incomplete, it experiences an increase in net foreign assets that coincides with a fall in the less productive investment and a rise in the more productive one. Convergence towards the steady state implies then both a better allocation of capital that generates endogenous aggregate TFP gains and a rise in aggregate investment that translates into higher growth.
Keywords
growth, capital flows, credit constraints, financial globalization, technological change
Create date
13/08/2012 17:14
Last modification date
21/08/2019 6:16
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