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International Saving, Investment and Trade
Authors:Peter Debaere  Ufuk Demiroglu
Institution:(1) Darden School of Business, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA;(2) CEPR, London, UK;(3) Congressional Budget Office, Washington, DC, USA
Abstract:Feldstein and Horioka (Econ J 90:314–329, 1980) observed that saving and investment move closely together in the major OECD countries. This finding is a puzzle if national economies are characterized by one sector neoclassical production functions—with diminishing returns to capital, a high level of savings in a country should create an incentive to export capital. In this paper, we show that this incentive disappears in the presence of multiple sectors with differing capital intensities. In a high saving country, national capital can be absorbed domestically without a decline in its marginal product through a shift in the sectoral composition of national production towards capital intensive sectors. This is nothing but the well-known Rybczynski effect. We present a modified version of the standard Heckscher–Ohlin (HO) Model to show that very small barriers to capital mobility are enough to force national savings to stay within the country of origin. We also argue that, while the assumptions of this model may appear special, they are not unrealistic for the developed countries in the Feldstein Horioka study. Some historical economic trends are also consistent with the picture presented in this paper. Finally, the paper shows that the conventional insights from the one sector neoclassical model can be completely overturned in a multi-sector setting when technological differences are introduced.
Contact Information Ufuk DemirogluEmail:
Keywords:Investment  Savings  OECD  Capital  Heckscher-Ohlin  International capital mobility
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