Publication Type
Working Paper
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
4-2010
Abstract
We develop a tractable, two-country, overlapping-generations model and show that cross-country differences in financial development can explain three recent empirical patterns of international capital flows: Financial capital flows from relatively poor to relatively rich countries while foreign direct investment flows in the opposite direction; net capital flows go from poor to rich countries; despite its negative net international investment position, the US receives a positive net international investment income. We also explore the welfare and distributional effects of international capital flows and show that the direction of capital flows may change along the convergence process of a developing country. Matsuyama (Econometrica 2004) argues that, in the presence of credit market imperfections, financial market globalization may lead to a steady-state equilibrium in which fundamentally identical countries end up with different levels of per-capita output. We show that this symmetry-breaking property depends crucially on the assumption that investment operates on the extensive rather than the intensive margin.
Keywords
capital account liberalization, financial development, financial frictions, foreign direct investment, symmetry breaking
Discipline
International Economics
Research Areas
International Economics
First Page
1
Last Page
39
Publisher
SMU Economics and Statistics Working Paper Series, No. 02-2010
City or Country
Singapore
Citation
von Hagen, Jurgen and ZHANG, Haiping.
Financial Development and the Patterns of International Capital Flows. (2010). 1-39.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/1172
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.