Results 81 to 90 of about 2,482 (132)
Measuring international capital mobility: A critical assessment of the use of saving and investment correlations [PDF]
Economists have been interested in the degree of international capital mobility for a variety of reasons. E.g., the extent to which public deficits crowd out domestic investments depends on the ease with which domestic firms may access the international ...
Sinn, Stefan
core
Testing for Breaks in Cointegrated Panels - with an Application to the Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle
Francesca Di Iorio, Stefano Fachin
doaj +2 more sources
Has China's Interregional Capital Mobility Been Low? A Spatial Econometric Estimation of the Feldstein-Horioka Equation [PDF]
We conducted a Feldstein-Horioka test for the degree of China's inter-provincial capital mobility each year from 1978 to 2007 using the spatial error model (SEM), a model of spatial econometrics considering spatial dependence, and a data set reflecting ...
Chen, Kuang-hui, Hashiguchi, Yoshihiro
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The Solution to the Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle
The purpose of this paper is to set out a surprisingly simple solution to the Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle or Paradox, which is that even though global financial markets appear to be integrated, levels of saving and investment are correlated across countries because financial markets cannot, by themselves, achieve net transfers of financial capital.
openaire
The 'Real' Explanation of the Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle
This paper shows that global capital markets cannot, by themselves, achieve net transfers of financial capital between countries and that both the integration of global financial markets as well as the integration of global goods markets are needed to achieve net transfers of capital between countries. Frictions (barriers to mobility) in one or both of
openaire
The Feldstein-Horioka Hypothesis in Countries with Varied Levels of Economic Development [PDF]
Piotr Misztal
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