Title: Institutions, Capital Flows and Financial Integration
1Institutions, Capital Flows and Financial
Integration
- James R. Lothian
- Fordham University
- Keynote Address to the
- Conference on Emerging Markets Finance
- Cass School of Business
- London, May 5-6, 2005
- Sponsored by Cass School of Business, JIMF, ESRC
and EBRD
2I. Introduction
- Focus of presentation International capital
flows in particular, capital flows from the
developed to the less developed countries. - Why are such flows not larger?
- Question has puzzled economists for the past four
decades. - What makes it especially puzzling today is the
much greater degree of financial integration now
than then - Adding to the puzzle Fact that a century ago
such flows were substantial
3II. The Lucas-Schultz Paradox
- Robert E. Lucas, Jr. (1990) poses the question
Why doesn't capital flow from rich to poor
countries? - It does not, he says, but should since such poor
countries lack capital when viewed by
rich-country standards. -
- If the neoclassical model were even close
...return differentials of this 58 times
greater magnitude, investment goods would flow
rapidly from the United states and other wealthy
countries to India and other poor countries.
4Schultzs view
- Theodore W. Schultz considered the same question
but from a different perspective. - Schultz argued that the capital stock in poor
countries was not low but high and of the wrong
kind. - What was actually scarce were higher quality
physical capital and the increased human capital
that farmers and other workers needed to utilize
it - Rates of return to these higher quality inputs
were high but rates of return to the traditional
inputs were low. - The question, therefore, was why investments in
the higher quality inputs have not been made
5III. Capital Market Integration in Historical
Perspective
- Three stylized facts of particular interest
- First Financial integration now is much greater
than 30 years ago and quite probably greater than
even 10 years ago. - Second Despite these increases it has only
recently returned to the level at which it stood
in 1913. - Third The time pattern of integration has
differed greatly between developed and less
developed countries.
6Real interest rates historically
- Examine cross-country standard deviations of ex
post real interest rates - Can view the ex ante real interest differential
as - ?-?' ??-??' (?-?? ) - (?'-??'
- where ? and ?? are real ex ante returns on
financial and physical assets and a prime
indicates the foreign country.
7- The ex post differential can, therefore, be
viewed as - r-r' ??-??' (?-?? ) - (?'-??') e
- where r-r' is the ex post real interest
differential and e is the relative error in
inflation forecasts. - Use quinquennial averages of data to lessen
the effects of these errors - First r.h.s term reflects the degree of
arbitrage across countries the second, the
degree of financial intermediation within the two
countries.
8Fig 1a. Real long-term interest rates,
cross-country standard deviations, 1800-2000
9Fig 1b. Real short-term interest rates,
cross-country standard deviations, 1800-2000
10Real interest rate results reflected in other data
- Equity returns (Lothian, 2002 Obstfeld and
Taylor, 2002), - Quantity indicators such as capital flows and
stocks of foreign assets (Lothian, 2000 Obstfeld
and Taylor, 2004), - Feldstein-Horioka savings-retention coefficients
(Obstfeld and Taylor, 2004), - Trade flows (Grassman,1980 Lothian, 2000) all
tell a similar story to that of real interest
rates.
11Fig 2. Real short-term interest rates,
cross-country standard deviations for 89
countries,1997-2003
12The expanded data set
- Three features of the chart stand out
- Increased cross-country divergences as the three
non-OECD groups are added sequentially - Declines for the OECD and for OECD plus Asia
during the last decade and a half - Progressive narrowing of real-interest rate
divergences in the case of OECD versus Asia and
the lack thereof for the OECD versus the other
two groups. - Integration therefore much less complete for the
periphery vis-à-vis the OECD core, but increasing
for Asia, and perhaps some of Latin
America-Caribbean, but not for Africa.
13Poor countries Now and Then
- Quantity data tell very much the same story with
regard to recent years as the real-interest data. - In 1997, 82 of foreign capital investment
stocks were in countries with levels of income
that were 60 or greater that of U.S. and only
14 in countries with income levels 40 or less
that of U.S.
14- Situation however was much different a century
ago - In 1913, countries with incomes 40 or less that
of the U.S. had a 50 share of the total and
countries with income 60 or more that of the
U.S. had a 46 share.
15Fig. 3a. Distribution of shares of world stock
offoreign investment capital by level of
receiving country income per capita (US100)
16Fig. 3b. Distribution of ratios of world foreign
investment capital to income by level of
receiving country income per capita (US100)
17IV. Economic Growth and the Lucas-Schultz Paradox
- Closely related to the question of why capital
does not flow from rich to poor countries is the
question of why poor countries do not grow much
more rapidly. - In the neoclassical model, capital flows to
equate real returns and real-income convergence
are two aspects of the same process.
18Growth accounting
- Standard equation takes the form
- dy sL dL sK dK R
- where
- dy is the change in the log of real output,
- dL the change in the log of the labor force,
- dK the change in log of the capital stock,
- sL and sK are the shares of the two factors
- R is the residual, the part of dy unexplained by
the weighted growth rates of L and K
19The relative contributionsof K and L
- In most exercises, R is positive and fairly
substantial, often exceeding the contribution of
one or the other input and at times the
contributions of both. - Terms applied to R technological change, human
capital accumulation and later total factor
productivity (TFP).
20Schultz, Transforming Traditional Agriculture
(1964)
- Technological improvements and human capital
accumulation simply different sides of the same
coin. - Both are improvements in the quality of the
conventional labor and capital inputs. - Standard growth models not designed to consider
the differences in levels of the rates of return
to incentives to investment and growth. - One of the reasons is that the profitability of
new classes of factors of production have been
concealed under technical change.
21Harberger in AEA Presidential Address 1998
- Harberger picks up on some of Schultzs theme.
- Conventional labels for R should be replaced.
- A better way of viewing R was in terms of real
cost reduction rather than technical change or
TFP. - Changes the focus from inventions and
externalities to microeconomics.
22The focus on real cost reductions
- Enables us to peel the onion a step further and
ask the next logical set of questions - What factor or factors typically account for
these real cost reductions? - Why do those factors operate more strongly during
some time periods and in some places than in
others?
23Harberger Government policies and societal
institutions are key
- Good policies price stability, an absence of
distorting government intervention at the levels
of the firm and the household, open international
trade and the like and good institutions, the
enforcement of private property being key
enable growth. - Provide incentive to engage in activities that
reduce real costs and also raise the rate of
return to investment. - Bad policies and bad societal institutions have
reverse effects.
24Policies and institutions
- Impact of institutional factors on growth has
been the theme of a much other literature in
recent years Norths (1990), historical
treatments, to DeSotos (2000) descriptive
account of the day-to-day difficulties
entrepreneurs faced in developing countries, to
econometric investigations of various sorts
(e.g., Barro, 1998). - Recent cross-country study (2004) by Gwartney,
Holcombe, and Lawson (GHL) is particularly
germane.
25The GHL Study
- Major feature of the study is the use of the
Economic Freedom of the World Index (EFW) - EFW index is made up of 5 component indices
size of government, legal system and property
rights, sound money, freedom to trade
internationally, and regulation, each of which,
in turn, has anywhere from 3 to 18 components. - GHL use the EFW index as a regressor in
cross-country regressions along with other
variables common in the growth literature as
controls to investigate the impact of policies
and institutions on both on the level of real
per capita GDP and its rate of growth.
26- GHL report statistically significant and
economically meaningful EFW effects in all
instances. - Find largely similar effects for the per-worker
stocks of physical and human capital, the rates
of change of both and the ratios of investment
and foreign direct investment to GDP. - Rerun real GDP growth regressions using residuals
from these latter regressions in place of the
actual variables as regressors. - Allowing for both direct and indirect EFW effects
in this way increases the estimated EFW impact
substantially.
27V. Policies, Institutions and Capital Flows
- I extend the GHL approach is to capital flows
- Use the EFW index and data from Lane and
Milesi-Ferretti (2001) and the World Banks
Global Development Finance data base. - Find substantial differences in flows across
countries grouped by level of EFW index and
statistically significant relationships
28Fig. 4a. Distribution of foreign investment to
GDP by level of EFW index in 1997
29Fig. 4b. Distribution of per capita FDI by level
of EFW index, 1997-2001
30Table 1. Cross-country regressions Foreign
capital stocks on EFW index
- Dependent variable Nobs Const. EFW RSQ SEE
- Ratio of for. invest. 64 -23360 4038 0.224 7356
- to population -3.604 4.236
-
- Ratio of net for. invest. 64 -0.699 0.135 0.184 0
.279 - to GDP -2.840 3.736
-
- Ratio of FDI to population 84 -207.2
48.5 0.147 103.8 -2.710 3.760 -
31VI. Conclusions
- Lets return to the question with which we
started why capital flows to poor countries
remain so sparse. - Savers in rich countries, it seems, should be
taking much greater advantage of the high returns
that in principle should await them as they did a
century ago. - I have argued that the reason it is not happening
now is due to the institutions that are in place
and the policies that have been pursued in many
if not most poor countries - In this regard, the emerging market countries
are, I believe, the exception that proves the
rule.