Capital mobility in developing countries: evidence from panel data

Autores

  • Fabiana Rocha Universidade de São Paulo. Faculdade de Economia, Administração e Contabilidade Autor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-41612007000300004

Palavras-chave:

mobilidade de capitais, dados em painel, heterogeneidade, países em desenvolvimento

Resumo

O objetivo deste artigo é mostrar que dados em painel podem ajudar a entender o puzzle de Feldstein-Horioka. O uso de dados em painel traria duas vantagens. Primeiro, faria com que fosse evitado o viés em direção à baixa mobilidade de capitais resultante do uso da média dos dados. Segundo, tornaria possível levar em conta efeitos específicos (heterogeneidade), como o tamanho do país. Usando dados em painel para o período 1960-1996 para 29 países em desenvolvimento, o impacto estimado da poupança sobre o investimento é bem menor, sendo possível concluir que existe um grau intermediário de mobilidade de capitais. Assim, o alto valor estimado para a correlação poupança-investimento parece resultar mais da existência de efeitos específicos individuais do país do que de baixa mobilidade de capitais. A estabilidade dos coeficientes estimados ao longo do tempo permanece, contudo, um puzzle.

Downloads

Os dados de download ainda não estão disponíveis.

Referências

Bagnai, A.; Manzocchi, S. Unit root tests of capital mobility in the less developed countries. Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv, v. 132, n. 3, p. 545-557, 1996.

Baxter, M.; Crucini, M. Explaining saving-investment correlations. American Economic Review, 83, p. 416-436, 1993.

Dooley, M.; Frankel, J.; Mathieson, D. International capital mobility: what do saving-

investment correlations tell us? IMF Staff Papers, v. 34, n. 3, p. 503-530, 1987.

Easterly, W. R.; Mauro, P.; Schmidt-Hebbel, K. Money demand and seigniorage

maximizing inflation. Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, v. 27, n. 2, p. 583-603, 1995.

Feldstein, M. Domestic saving and international capital movements in the short run

and the long run. The European Economic Review 21, p. 129-151, 1983.

Feldstein, M.; Bacchetta, P. National saving and international investment. In: Bernheim,

D.; Shoven, J. (eds.), National saving and economic performance. Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 1991, p. 201-220.

Feldstein, M.; Horioka, C. Domestic saving and international capital flows. Economic

Journal, 90, p. 314-329, June 1980.

Fleming, J. M. Domestic financial policies under fixed and under floating exchange

rates. IMF Staff Papers, v. 9, n. 3, p. 369-380, 1962.

Frankel, J. International capital mobility and crowding-out in the U.S. economy:

imperfect integration of financial markets or of goods markets? In: Hafer, R.

(ed.), How open is the U.S. economy? Lexington: Lexington Books for the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 1986, p. 33-67.

Frankel, J. Quantifying international capital mobility in the 1980s. In: Bernheim, D.;

Shoven, J. (eds.), National saving and economic performance. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1991, p. 227-260.

Ghosh, A. R.; Ostry, J. D. The current account in developing countries: a perspective

from the consumption-smoothing approach. The World Bank Economic Review, v. 9, n. 2, p. 305-333, 1995.

Granger, C. W. J.; Newbold, P. Spurious regression in econometrics. Journal of Econometrics,

v. 2, n. 2, p. 111-120, 1974.

Harberger, A. C. Vignettes on the world capital market. American Economic Review, v. 70, Papers and Proceedings, p. 331-337, 1980.

Hausmann, J. Specification tests in econometrics. Econometrica, p. 1251-1271, November

Hussein, K. A.; Mello Jr., L. R. International capital mobility in developing countries:

theory and evidence. Journal of International Money and Finance, 18, p. 367-381, 1999.

Levich, R. M. Empirical studies of exchange rates: price behavior, rate determination

and market efficiency. In: Jones, R. W.; Kenen, P. B. (eds.), Handbook of international economics, v. II. Amsterdan: Elsevier, 1985.

Mamingi, N. Saving-investment correlations and capital mobility: the experience of

developing countries. Journal of Policy Modeling, v. 19, n. 6, p. 605-626, 1997.

Montiel, P. Capital mobility in developing countries: some measurement issues and

empirical estimates. World Bank Economic Review, v. 8, n. 3, p. 311-350, 1994.

Mundell, R. A. International economics. New York: MacMillan, 1968.

Murphy, R. G. Capital mobility and the relationship between saving and investment

in OECD countries. Journal of International Money and Finance, v. 3, p. 327-

, 1984.

Murphy, R. G. Productivity shocks, non-traded goods and optimal capital accumulation.

European Economic Review, 30, p. 1081-1095, 1986.

Obstfeld, M. Capital mobility in the world economy: theory and evidence. Carnegie-

Rochester Conference on Public Policy, 24, p. 55-104, 1986.

Obstfeld, M.; Rogoff, K. The six major puzzles in international macroeconomics: is there a common cause?. NBER Working Paper 7777, 2000.

Phillips, P. C. B.; Hansen, B. E. Statistical inference in instrumental variables regression

with I (1) processes. Review of Economic Studies, v. 57, n. 1, p. 99-125, 1990.

Sinn, S. Saving-investment correlations and capital mobility: on the evidence from

annual data. Economic Journal, 102, p. 1162-1170, September 1992.

Summers, L. H. Tax policy and international competitiveness. In: Frenkel, Jacob A.

(ed.), International aspects of fiscal policies. NBER Conference Report, Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1988, p. 340-375.

Tesar, L. Saving, investment and international capital flows. Journal of International Economics, 31, p. 55-78, 1991.

Wong, D. What do saving-investment relationships tell us about capital mobility?

Journal of International Money and Finance, v. 9, p. 60-74, 1990.

Downloads

Publicado

30-09-2007

Edição

Seção

Não definida

Como Citar

Rocha, F. (2007). Capital mobility in developing countries: evidence from panel data . Estudos Econômicos (São Paulo), 37(3), 547-561. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-41612007000300004