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Capital Flows to Developing Countries: The Allocation Puzzle

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TLDR
This paper showed that the allocation of capital flows across developing countries is the opposite of this prediction: capital does not flow more to countries that invest and grow more, and the solution to the allocation puzzle lies at the nexus between growth, saving and international reserve accumulation.
Abstract
The textbook neoclassical growth model predicts that countries with faster productivity growth should invest more and attract more foreign capital. We show that the allocation of capital flows across developing countries is the opposite of this prediction: capital does not flow more to countries that invest and grow more. We call this puzzle the “allocation puzzle”. Using a wedge analysis, we find that the pattern of capital flows is driven by national saving: the allocation puzzle is a saving puzzle. Further disaggregation of capital flows reveals that the allocation puzzle is also related to the pattern of accumulation of international reserves. The solution to the “allocation puzzle”, thus, lies at the nexus between growth, saving, and international reserve accumulation. We conclude with a discussion of some possible avenues for research.

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International Capital Flows and the Growth of World Commodity Trade

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the question of how much international capital flows have contributed to the recent growth in world trade and present evidence showing that large net financial flows from capital-scarce to capital-abundant countries have increased dierences in capital-labour ratios, causing countries to become more specialised and increasing the gains from factor-proportions trade.
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Sudden Stops, Productivity and the Optimal Level of International Reserves for Small Open Economies

TL;DR: In this article , the authors extend the Jeanne-Rancière (Econ J 121:905-930, 2011) endowment small open economy (SOE) model to a SOE with production that accounts for the main sources of economic growth.
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Resource Discoveries, FDI Bonanzas, and Local Multipliers: Evidence from Mozambique

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors show that giant and unpredictable oil and gas discoveries trigger FDI bonanzas across developing countries, and that these booms are driven by new projects in sectors such as manufacturing, retail, services, and construction.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth

TL;DR: The authors examined whether the Solow growth model is consistent with the international variation in the standard of living, and they showed that an augmented Solow model that includes accumulation of human as well as physical capital provides an excellent description of the cross-country data.
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Finance and Growth: Schumpeter Might Be Right

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined a cross-section of about 80 countries for the period 1960-89 and found that various measures of financial development are strongly associated with both current and later rates of economic growth.
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Why do Some Countries Produce So Much More Output Per Worker than Others

TL;DR: This article showed that the differences in capital accumulation, productivity, and therefore output per worker are driven by differences in institutions and government policies, which are referred to as social infrastructure and called social infrastructure as endogenous, determined historically by location and other factors captured by language.
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Domestic Saving and International Capital Flows

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the international capital market and analyzed a wide range of issues including the nation's optimal rate of saving and the incidence of tax changes and found that saving that originates in a country remains 'to be invested there'.
Posted Content

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