The Composition of Capital Flows When Emerging Market Firms Face Financing Constraints Katherine A. Smith1
Diego Valderrama2
1 Department
of Economics U.S. Naval Academy 2 Economic
Research Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
University of Oregon
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
1 / 39
Motivation Question How does the composition of capital flows into the emerging markets vary over the business cycle? What drives this composition? Answer Total private inflows are positively correlated with the business cycle. However, each type of inflow has different correlations with the business cycle. Financial frictions explain interactions between flows. Implications Volatility of capital flows is not necessarily “bad,” it is an equilibrium result. Capital control policy may reduce investment and welfare. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
2 / 39
Motivation Question How does the composition of capital flows into the emerging markets vary over the business cycle? What drives this composition? Answer Total private inflows are positively correlated with the business cycle. However, each type of inflow has different correlations with the business cycle. Financial frictions explain interactions between flows. Implications Volatility of capital flows is not necessarily “bad,” it is an equilibrium result. Capital control policy may reduce investment and welfare. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
2 / 39
Motivation Question How does the composition of capital flows into the emerging markets vary over the business cycle? What drives this composition? Answer Total private inflows are positively correlated with the business cycle. However, each type of inflow has different correlations with the business cycle. Financial frictions explain interactions between flows. Implications Volatility of capital flows is not necessarily “bad,” it is an equilibrium result. Capital control policy may reduce investment and welfare. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
2 / 39
Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
3 / 39
Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
3 / 39
Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
3 / 39
Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
3 / 39
Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
4 / 39
Stylized Facts of Emerging Market Private Capital Inflows
Composition varies dramatically by country/region There are strong trends in the overall volume and the composition of flows Varying degrees of substitutability /complimentarity Sum of flows is highly correlated with investment (pro-cyclical) Each type of flow has a different correlation with business cycle Important to look at all flows together, not in isolation
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Composition Varies Dramatically by Country/Region Figure: External financing by type of flow, regional averages, real dollars
Annual data in millions real U.S. dollars. Source: IFS. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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There are Strong Trends in Inflows Figure: External financing by type of flow, regional averages, % of GDP
Notes: Annual gross inflows in millions of U.S. dollars, expressed as a percentage of GDP. Source: IFS. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Varying Degrees of Substitutability and Complementarity
Table: Inflows Correlations Latin America & C. Argentina Brazil Chile Mexico
ρ(FDI, PE) -0.077 -0.871 -0.149 0.377 -0.135
ρ(FDI, Debt) -0.131 0.015 -0.351 -0.105 -0.245
ρ(PE, Debt) 0.219 0.197 0.448 0.271 0.347
East Asia & Pacific Hong Kong Indonesia South Korea Thailand
0.141 0.277 0.164 0.324 0.077
-0.080 0.196 0.266 -0.188 -0.515
0.242 0.373 0.781 -0.018 -0.309
-0.196 -0.100 -0.293
-0.431 -0.353 -0.508
0.143 0.215 0.071
Europe/ Central Asia Hungary Turkey
Source: IFS. Average country correlation per region.
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Sum of Flows is Pro-Cyclical
Table: Cyclical Behavior of Capital Flows: Correlation with Investment Latin America & C. Argentina Brazil Chile Mexico
ρ(I,Total) 0.180 0.774 0.199 -0.422 0.104
ρ(I, Debt) 0.307 0.736 0.082 0.187 0.158
ρ(I, FDI) -0.153 0.154 0.104 -0.558 -0.421
ρ(I, PE) 0.075 0.134 0.352 -0.035 0.068
East Asia & Pacific Hong Kong Indonesia South Korea Thailand
0.244 0.254 -0.051 0.534 0.505
0.318 0.324 0.094 0.575 0.564
-0.155 0.272 0.026 -0.128 -0.680
-0.092 -0.404 -0.187 -0.038 0.078
Europe/Central Asia Hungary Turkey
0.327 0.216 0.437
0.500 0.492 0.508
-0.594 -0.408 -0.780
0.170 0.115 0.225
Source: IFS. Average country correlation per region.
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Important to Look at All Inflows Together Figure: Gross Market Based Capital Flows To Mexico
Annual data. Inflows shown as a share of total inflows. GDP shown as percent deviation from trend. Source: IFS. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Research on Capital Flow Composition Theoretical mostly studies each type of flow type in isolation Razin,Sadka and Yuen (1999a and 2001a) info asymmetries Albuquerque (2003) lack of enforceability of claims drive FDI Hull and Tesar (2001) FDI and Portfolio equity risk sharing and specialization Previous research able to explain long run pecking order but not short run volatility Empirical work studies relative volatility of flows and push and pull determinants Campion and Neumann (2004) Latin American economies gross inflows (FDI, portfolio equity, and debt). Montiel and Reinhart (1999) capital controls influence the composition of capital inflows but not the volume of flows. Lane and Milesi-Ferretti (2000) annual cross-sectional study. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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We Propose
We claim that many of the differences in the dynamic composition of capital flows are due to differences in the financial institutions. To disentangle the empirical features of the data, we ask whether we can build a model that can rationalize the flows of a particular country, e.g. Mexico.
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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What We Do
We use an small open economy RBC model where occasionally binding debt and dividend constraints as well as search and issuing costs generate an endogenous composition of capital flows. Amend canonical model of firm financing decision to fit in an international framework appropriate for emerging markets Theoretical framework disentangles the co-movement between different types of capital flows Match model moments to data Use the model as a policy tool to determine the impact of capital controls and foreign interest rate shocks
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
13 / 39
Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
14 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Key Results of the Model
Emerging markets firms face non-trivial financial frictions Given these frictions, an external capital structure emerges endogenously We take the long-run capital structure as given Financing premium emerges and is driven by exogenous and endogenous factors Counter-cyclical financing premium drives interest rate and current account Flows exhibit varying degree of substitutability Cost to finance internationally increases ρ(S, I )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
15 / 39
Model Overview RBC-style small open economy (SOE) Domestic households: work and invest in domestic firms Domestic firms: hire labor, invest, finance, subject to productivity shocks Incomplete markets: one-period non-contingent bonds and domestic equity Bonds and portfolio equity traded with ROW, face occasionally binding debt limits and issuing costs for debt and equity
Rest of the world (ROW) Global credit market determines world interest rate Multinationals searching to invest in SOE Must match with a domestic firm in order to purchase them Pay a search costs to improve probability of a match
Foreign agents purchase equity from the domestic economy Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Domestic Households in the SOE
Preferences (GHH): U=
X
β t U (ct − G(lt ))
(1)
t
Period budget constraint: st γt divt + pt + Θt VtNASH + 1 + rtd btd + wt lt d = ct + st+1 pt + bt+1 (2)
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Domestic Households’ Optimality Conditions
Disutility from working = wage rate ∂G(lt ) ≡ Glt = wt ∂lt
(3)
Euler equation for domestic bond accumulation Uct+1 d 1 + rt = E β Uct
(4)
Euler condition for shares Uct+1 γt+1 divt+1 + pt+1 E β =1 Uct pt
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
(5)
January 2007
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Domestic Firms in the SOE Follows partial eqilibrium analysis of Fazzari, Hubbard, and Petersen (1988) Adjust dividends to account for secondary offerings. gt + VtD = div
1 (V D ) 1 + rtd t+1
(6)
gt ≡ divt − sect where div Include the probability of being purchased by foreign multinational gt + Θt VtNASH + VtD = γt div
1 D Vt+1 . d 1 + rt+1
(7)
In the competitive equilibrium: cash flows are discounted by households’ MRS 0 1 i U (ct+i ) Mt+i = = β . (8) d U 0 (ct ) 1 + rt+i Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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The Formal Problem of Domestic Firms Domestic firm’s problem: VtD
=
max
lt ,divt ,kt+1 ,bt+1 ,sect
Et
∞ X
NASH f t+j + Θt+j Vt+j Mt+j γt+j div
(9)
j=0
subject to: [λt ] divt = exp(et )f (kt , lt ) − wt lt + (1 − δ)kt − kt+1 − (1 + r ∗ exp(zt )) bt sect bt+1 + sec 1 − ωsec + bt+1 1 − ωb , kt kt [ηtdiv ] divt ≥divmin 0, [ηtb ] bt+1 ≤χkt+1 , [ηtsec ] sect ≥0. Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Domestic Firms’ Optimality Conditions Letting qt = λt + ηtb MC of investing = Marginal return γt+1 qt = E[Mt+1 qt+1 MPKt+1 ] + ηtb γt
(10)
MC of investing = Marginal benefit from issuing dividends qt = λt + ηtb = 1 + ηtdiv
(11)
MC of investing = Marginal benefit from issuing bonds qt =
w E[Mt+1 qt+1 γt+1 γt ](1 + r )
(1 − ω − ωb0 0 )
+
ηtb χ
(12)
MC of investing = Marginal benefit from secondary offerings 1 + ηtsec qt = 0 ) (1 − ω − ωsec Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
(13) 21 / 39
Interest Rates
The financial frictions create a wedge between domestic interest rate, rtd , and the international interest rate, r w : (1 + rtd ) = (1 + r w )
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
qt+1 E[Mt+1 γt+1 γt qt ]
(1 − ω −
ωb0 0 )E(Mt+1 )
Composition of Capital Flows
+
(1 − κ)ηtb E(Mt+1 )
January 2007
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Multinationals Search for Value Difference between the domestic firm’s value the domestic residents and the value of the firm to the foreign buyer who can relax its financial frictions.
Domestic and foreign firms split surplus: h i Surplust ≡ S = VtF − VtD ≥ 0
(14)
Surplus split determines price of domestic constrained firms: h i VtNASH = P = ψ VtF − VtD + VtD
(15)
Foreign firms choose effort, et to maximize their expected surplus for a given probability of search Θ(et ): h i max Θ(et ) VtF − VtNASH − et (16) et
Evolution of domestic ownership of firms, γ: γt+1 = γt + (1 − γt )κ − Θ(et ) Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
(17) January 2007
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Multinationals’ behavior
Optimality condition for the multinationals: et =
−1 + (a(V F − V NASH ))0.5 , a
which gives level of FDI: Θ(e)V NASH =FDI
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Interaction between inflows
From the domestic firm’s problem: ηb qt+1 γt+1 (1 + r w ) − t = ω + ωb0 0 1 − E Mt+1 qt γt χ From the foreign multinational’s problem: Θ(e)V NASH = FDI
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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All Markets Clear
d i bt
P d = i bt+1 = 0, P Domestic shares must all be bought up i st = 1 Domestic bonds in zero net supply
P
∀i
Labor market clears Aggregate resource constraint: gt + wt lt + Θt VtNASH . ct = γt div
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
(18)
January 2007
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National accounts and balance of payments
Define gross investment: it ≡ kt+1 − kt (1 − δ) FDI
yt − ct − it + −(1 − γt )divt − | {z } | {z net exports
|
net factor payments
{z
current account
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
portfolio flows
bonds }| { z }| { z }| { z + ∆bt+1 + Θt VtNASH + (1 − γt )sect } | {z }
rt∗ bt
capital flows
}
|
Composition of Capital Flows
{z
}
financial account
January 2007
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Competitive Equilibrium Given a stochastic process of productivity shocks and initial conditions, a competitive equilibrium is defined by stochastic sequences of allocations [ct , lt , bt+1 , kt+1 , sect , Θt , et ] and prices [wt , rtd ], and value functions, [VtNASH , VtD , VtF ], such that: 1
domestic firms maximize dividends subject to the constant returns-to-scale technology, taking factor and goods prices as given
2
households maximize utility subject to the budget constraint and financing constraints taking as given factor prices, goods prices, the world interest rate and asset prices
3
foreign multi-national firms maximize their surplus
4
the market-clearing conditions for equity, labor, and goods markets hold
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Domestic Firms’ Problem Can Be Formulated as a Time Recursive Problem
V (k, b, γ, ) = 0max γdiv(, k, b, b0 , k 0 ) + ΘV NASH + k ,b0 ,sec h i D 0 0 0 0 E Mt+1 V k , b , γ , D
(19)
subject to: 0 divmin < div(, k, b, b0 , k 0 ) b0 ≤ k 0 χ 0 ≤ sec
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
30 / 39
Solution Algorithm
Step 1 Initialize algorithm: multinationals: Make a guess of the value of the firm to multinationals, V NASH (x, ), and the probability that the domestic firm is taken over, Θ (x, ). households: Make a guess of the domestic households marginal rate of substitution, M (x, ). Step 2 Given Θ (x, ), (1 + R∗ exp(z)), M (x, ), and V NASH (x, ), solve the domestic firm’s problem to obtain the value of the domestic firm V D (x, ). This will be time consuming because you do not want to allow the firm to think they can impact next period’s prices by their choice of k 0 , b0 , and sec.
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Solution Algorithm continued
Step 3 Given k 0 (x, ), b0 (x, ), and sec(x, ): multinationals: Using V D (x, ), calculate the Nash equilibrium price of the firm, V NASH (x, ), multinationals will pay and the probability of being taking over a domestic firm, Θ(x, ) from the FOC of the multinational. households: Use the households Euler equation to compute the households marginal rate of substitution, M (x, ). Step 4 With updated Θ (x, ), (1 + R∗ exp(z)), M (x, ), and V NASH (x, ), return to Step 2 and repeat until the price of the firm, V NASH , converges.
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Functional Forms
f (k, l) = Al α k 1−α ωB B 0 2 B ω = 2 k 0 2 ωN sec ωN = 2 k ae Θ (e) = 1 + ae u(C ) =
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
(20) (21) (22) (23)
c 1−σ − 1 1−σ
Composition of Capital Flows
(24)
January 2007
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Preliminary Numerical Findings
Interest rate (weakly) counter-cyclical Savings and investment correlation increases as frictions rise FDI and debt varying correlations with BC FDI and debt varying correlation depending on magnitude of frictions
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Table: Simulated Business Cycles Statistics Mexico Correlation with output Investment Consumption Capital Interest Rate FDI
ωB = 0.1
ωB = 0.5
0.64 0.96 0.86 −0.09 0.13
0.90 0.97 0.85 −0.07 −0.22
0.76 0.85
−0.27
Std. dev. relative to output Consumption Investment Capital
1.60 3.71
0.60 2.89 1.44
0.60 2.14 1.50
Correlation with investment Debt FDI Saving
0.39 −0.31
0.07 −0.15 0.63
0.05 −0.18 0.89
−0.25
−0.27
−0.15
Correlation with debt FDI
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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7. 22 4 7. 76 35 47 0 7. 88 47 28 70 7. 00 60 9 7. 31 72 19 9 7. 23 85 71 5 7. 35 98 52 1 8. 47 10 33 7 8. 59 23 14 3 8. 70 35 95 9 8. 82 48 76 5 8. 94 61 57 2 8. 06 73 37 8 8. 18 86 18 42 8. 99 99 9 9. 04 11 18 6 9. 53 24 61 2 9. 65 36 42 8 9. 77 49 23 4 9. 89 62 04 1 9. 00 74 85 7 9. 12 87 66 3 9. 24 99 46 9 10 36 . 1 27 2 10 54 . 2 81 5 10 15 . 3 99 7 10 77 . 5 17 0 10 38 . 6 35 2 10 99 . 7 53 56 07 1
Capital Distribution
3.00E-02
2.50E-02
2.00E-02
1.50E-02
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF) High Cost Low Cost
1.00E-02
5.00E-03
0.00E+00
Composition of Capital Flows January 2007 36 / 39
Bond Distribution 5.00E-01 4.50E-01 4.00E-01 3.50E-01 3.00E-01 High Cost Low Cost
2.50E-01 2.00E-01 1.50E-01 1.00E-01 5.00E-02
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
0. 0 03 0. 3 06 0. 6 09 0. 9 13 0. 2 16 0. 5 19 0. 8 23 0. 1 26 0. 4 29 7 0. 3 0. 3 36 0. 3 39 0. 6 42 0. 9 46 0. 2 49 5
-0 .4 6 -0 2 .4 2 -0 9 .3 96 -0 .3 63 -0 .3 -0 3 .2 9 -0 7 .2 6 -0 4 .2 3 -0 1 .1 9 -0 8 .1 65 -0 .1 3 -0 2 .0 9 -0 9 .0 6 -0 6 .0 33
0.00E+00
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Outline 1
Introduction Stylized facts Previous literature Our approach
2
Firm financing in a small open economy Domestic households Domestic firms Multinationals Competitive equilibrium
3
Numerical findings Solution algorithm Functional forms and calibration Results
4
Conclusions and pending work
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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Final Remarks
Conclusions: Financial frictions appear to be able to capture capital flow volatility Financial frictions determine degree of substitutability/complementarity Pending work: Sensitivity analysis Policy implications: capital controls
Smith, Valderrama (USNA, FRBSF)
Composition of Capital Flows
January 2007
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