* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download This PDF is a selection from a published volume from... Economic Research Volume Title: NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics 2007
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
This PDF is a selection from a published volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research Volume Title: NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics 2007 Volume Author/Editor: Richard Clarida and Francesco Giavazzi, organizers Volume Publisher: University of Chicago Press ISSN: 1932-8796 Volume URL: http://www.nber.org/books/clar07-1 Conference Date: June 15-16, 2007 Publication Date: January 2009 Chapter Title: On the Welfare Implications of Financial Globalization without Financial Development Chapter Author: Enrique G. Mendoza, Vincenzo Quadrini, José-Víctor Ríos-Rull Chapter URL: http://www.nber.org/chapters/c3012 Chapter pages in book: (283 - 312) 6 On the Welfare Implications of Financial Globalization without Financial Development EnriqueG. Mendoza, University of Maryland,IMF,and NBER Vincenzo Quadrini, University of SouthernCalifornia,CEPR,and NBER Jose-VictorRios-Rull,, UniversityofPennsylvania,CAERP,CEPR,and NBER ".. . muchoftheMexican byforeigners However, banking systemis nowcontrolled Feesremain hasnotledtocheaper thisinfluxofforeigncapital high,producing banking. inMexover30percent Banking interest ratesaverage Credit-card bumper profits. icoremains expensive for thecountry's for banks,andintimidatingly veryprofitable poor." TheEconomist, Nov.25,2006 6.1 Introduction The questionof whether financialglobalizationis beneficialfor the participatingcountriesis the subjectof a profound and divisive debate in academicand policy circles.Criticslike Stiglitz (2002),Soros (2002),and Bhagwati(2004)offerominous assessmentsarguingthat financialglobalizationat best has failed to produce the largebenefitsit promised and at worst is a flawed policy leading to economic collapses. On the other hand, supporterslike Mishkin(2006),Rajanand Zingales(2003),Frankel (2007),and Obstfeldand Taylor(2004),make a strongcase in defense of financialglobalization.Theircase is founded not just on traditionaltheoreticalargumentshighlightingthe gains fromglobalasset trading(international risk sharing,efficient reallocationof capital,etc.). They argue that the development of domestic financial systems- and the social, political, and economic institutions that anchor them is a necessary conditionfor countriesto reapthe potentialbenefitsfromfinancialglobalization. This argumentraises key unansweredquestions:Whatare the implications of going forwardwith financialglobalizationif domestic financial marketsremainunderdevelopedin some countries?Does this neutralizethe gains from globalizationwithout furtherimplicationsor are there adverse consequences?In the case of adverse consequences, are 284 Mendoza,Quadrini,and Rios-Rull those limited to the riskof financialcrashesor sudden stops, or arethere systemicnegative effects?How largeare these effectsand can economic policy mitigate them? This paper aims to answer these questions by studying the effects of financialintegrationamongs countries that differ in the degree of domestic financialdevelopment. We formalize cross-countrydifferences in financialdevelopmentthroughthe tightnessof borrowingconstraints in a multicountry,generalequilibriummodel with heterogenousagents and incompleteasset markets.Weshow that,if financialglobalizationis not accompaniedby domestic financialdevelopment,liberalizationcan have sizable consequences on the distributionof wealth and adverse welfare effects on some of the participatingcountries.In particular,we show that, even though liberalizationleads to a significantincreasein wealth inequality in the most financiallydeveloped country,the aggregatewelfare consequencesare still positive for this country.By contrast, in the countrywith less developed financialmarkets,the aggregatewelfare consequencesare negative even though the distributionof wealth does not change much. The welfare effects we estimatedwarf the small gains from internationalasset trading in open economy real business cycle models (see, for example, Backus,Kehoe, and Kydland 1992;and Mendoza 1991), and they are comparableto existing measures of the welfaregains obtainedby removingdistortionson capitalaccumulation in open economies (e.g., Gourinchasand Jeanne 2006; Mendoza and Tesar1998;and Quadrini 2005). Moreover,these adverse effects arise with the gradualbuildup of large global financialimbalancesbut without the occurrenceof financialcrises. The analysisconductedin this paperis motivatedby some of the findings from our previous work (see Mendoza, Quadrini,and Rios-Rull 2007,MQRhenceforth).Although the primarygoal of that study was to investigate the emergence of global imbalances,we also found that financialintegrationcould resultin aggregatewelfarecosts for less financially developed countries.This suggestion was based on the quantitative predictionsof a multicountrymodel where agentsfacenoninsurable idiosyncraticshocks to endowments and investments, and market incompleteness derives from the limited enforcementof credit contracts. Thismodel was able to explaintwo key featuresof the globalimbalances that startedto emerge in the early 1980swith the gradualprocess of financialglobalization:(a)a seculardeclinein the net foreignassetposition of the United States,which reached-8 percentof world gross domestic product (GDP)in 2006,and (b) a shift in the compositionof the U.S. ex- On the Welfare Implications of Globalization without Development 285 ternal asset portfolio featuring a large negative position on risk-free bonds and a positive position in riskyassets. In this paper,we use a model with some of the characteristicsof the MQRsetup but with modificationsthatsharpenthe focus of the analysis on the consequences of financial integration for the distribution of wealth within each countryand for the socialwelfare acrossindividuals and nations. On one hand, we simplify the MQRmodel by abstracting from shocks to investments and consider only idiosyncraticshocks to earnings. Investmentshocks are importantfor capturing the portfolio compositionof foreignasset holdings- which was one of the foci of our previous paper- but they are not crucialfor the welfare implicationsof capitalmarketsliberalization.We furthersimplify the model by assuming the absenceof state-contingentclaims.Cross-countrydifferencesin financialmarketsderive from exogenous differencesin borrowingconstraints.On the other hand, we extend the MQRsetup by introducing the accumulationof physicalcapital.Thisallows us to combinethe analysis of the distributionaleffects of globalization with the traditional analysis of efficiencygains from capital reallocationinduced by financial integration. Thepaperis organizedas follows. Section6.2 describesthe model and defines equilibriaunder financialautarkyand under global financialintegration.Section6.2.2provides an intuitive characterizationof the two equilibriaand the implicationsof moving from financialautarkyto financialglobalization.Section6.3 presents the quantitativeresults,with particularfocus on the model's normativeimplications.Section6.4 conducts a sensitivity analysis. Section 6.5 examines some policy implications, and section 6.6 concludes. 6.2 The Model Consider a world economy composed of I countries, indexed by i, all with identical characteristicsexcept for the level of domestic financial development (or the deepness of domestic financialmarkets).Financial development is capturedby a parametera1as specified following. In the quantitativeexercise conducted in the next section, we also allow for heterogeneityin populationand productivityto matchthe relativesizes of countriesin the model and in the realworld. However, differencesin population and productivityact only as rescalingfactorsin the derivation of the equilibriumconditions with capital mobility and they are not relevantfor the qualitativetheory of the paper.Therefore,through- 286 Mendoza,Quadrini,and Rios-Rull out this section, we present the model assuming that countries differ only in a\ Each country is populated by a continuum of agents of total mass 1, and each agent maximizes expected lifetime utility E Z~=0PfLZ(cf ), where ctis consumption at time t and |3is the intertemporal discount factor. The utility function is strictly increasing and concave, with U(0) = -oo and U"(c) > 0. Agents are endowed with efficiency units of labor zt that they supply inelastically to the domestic labor market for the competitive wage wr The efficiency units of labor change stochastically according to a discrete Markov process that is independent across agents (i.e., the shock is idiosyncratic). There are no aggregate shocks, and therefore, the issue of cross-country risk-sharing, like in Clarida (1990), is not an issue here. Each agent has the ability to operate the production technology yt = A($t\~*y, where ktis the input of capital, lt is the efficiency units of labor employed in production (i.e., an individual agent's labor demand), and A is the Total Factor Productivity that is constant. We assume that 0 < v < 1 so that there are decreasing returns to scale in production. Capital depreciates at rate 8. For analytical convenience we define F(kt, lt) = which represents the sum of output plus the capital (1 - b)kt+ A(fcfZJ"e)v, stock net of depreciation. The assumptions that the production technology is individually operated and displays decreasing returns are not standard in heterogenousagents models with idiosyncratic risks. These assumptions allow us to distinguish the portfolio choice of an individual agent between physical capital and bonds. However, because there is no uncertainty in production, the aggregate properties of the model are similar to those of a standard model with an aggregate constant-returns-to-scale production function. We also assume that there is a cost in changing the stock of capital. The role of this adjustment cost is to make the cross-country reallocation of physical capital sluggish.1 This reflects the fact that financial capital is more mobile than physical capital. However, as we will show in the sensitivity analysis, the adjustment cost is not important for the welfare results of the paper. The adjustment cost takes the form y(Kt, kt+1)= (|)• (kt+1/Kt- 1)2,where kt+1is the individually-chosen input of capital for the next period and Ktis the aggregate stock of capital in the current period. The assumption that the individual adjustment cost depends on the aggregatecapital stock at t, instead of the individualcapital at t, makes the formulation of the agent's problem simpler because we do not need On the WelfareImplicationsof Globalizationwithout Development 287 to add kt as an individual state variable. However, we will show in the sensitivity analysis that the use of the more standard adjustment cost, (p(fct, kt+1)- <|>• (kt+1/kt- 1)2,leads to very similar results. In addition to capital, agents can trade non-state-contingent assets or bonds, bt+vThe market interest rate on these bonds is rj.Define at as the end-of-period net worth before consumption. The budget constraint is: + a, = c( + <p(K(/fc(+1) fc(+1+-%lr. (1) Net worth evolves according to: aM = et+1wt+1+ F(kt+VlM) lMwt+1+ bt+v (2) Thus, net worth is the sum of labor income, the value of operating the production technology, net of wage payments, and bonds. The degree of domestic financial development is captured by a limited liability constraint requiring net worth not to be smaller than a minthat is, imum value aim, (3) «(+1>tf. This constraint imposes an exogenous borrowing limit: the lower the value of a1,the higher the agents' ability to borrow.2 The lower bound a{ is the only exogenousdifference among countries. 6.2.1 Optimization Problem and Equilibrium be a (deterministic) sequence of prices in country i. A Let {r;, w>i+1}"w single agent's optimization problem can be written as: Vfo, at) = max \U(ct) ct'bt+l'kt+Vlt+l L + 0 ^X^e^, e,+1 at+1)g(^ e»+i)| (4) J subject to (1), (2), (3). Notice that this is the optimization problem for any deterministic sequence of prices, not only steady states. This motivates the time subscript in the value function. The solution to the agent's problem provides the decision rules for consumption, cj(e,a), bonds bj+1(e,a), productive assets, kj+1(e,a), and labor / j+1(e,a). These rules determine the evolution of the distribution of agents over e and a, which we denote by Mj(e, a). The definition of equilibria with and without international mobility of capital are as follows: 288 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull 1 (Autarky). Given the level of financial development, a\ initial a general aggregate capital, K\, and distributions, M;(e, a), for ie [!,...,!}, without is equilibrium mobility of capital defined by sequences of: (a) agents' policies {c;(e, a), fc;+1(e, a), fc;+1(e, a), Z;+1(e, a)};=t; (b) value functions (e) distribuW\{E, a))%t; (c) prices [r\, w\+£=t; (d) aggregate capital {K;+1}T%; tions {M^(e,fl)}7=f+rSuch that: (i) the agents' policies solve problem (4); (ii) the markets for assets clear, fji+1(e, a)M;(e, a) = K;+1, JJ?T+1(e, a)M;(e, a) = 0, and ie {!,..., 1); (in) the labor market clears J^+^e, a)M!T(e,a) for alli>t = alli>t and ie {!,..., I); (iv) the sequence of distributions is consis\,for tent with the initial distribution, the individual policies, and the idiosyncratic shocks. Definition 2 (Financial Given the level of financial develintegration). initial and a1, distributions, M|(e, a), for i e opment, aggregate capital, K\, a with {1, ...,/}, general equilibrium mobility of capital is defined by sequences of: (a) agents' policies {c;(e, a), fc;+1(e,a), fc;+1(e,a), Z;+1(e,a)};=t; (b) value functions {V;(e, a)};=t; (c) prices \r\, w\+l)%t; (d) aggregate capital {X;+1}*=f;(e) distributions {M^(e, a)}*=t+1.Such that: (i) agents' policies solve problem (4); (ii) the asset markets clear, /e^+1(e, a)M!T(e,a) = K^for all i>t,ie {1, ...,/}, and Ejg^+ife' fl)^(e/ a) ~ 0//or cM 7 - t, and interest rates are equalized across countries, r\ - rTfor alli^t and ie {1, . . . , I); (Hi) the labor markets = clear /e>fl^+1(e, allT>t and ie [1, ...,/}; (iv) the sequence a)Mir(z, a) \,for distributions is consistent with the initial distribution, individual policies, of and the idiosyncratic shocks. Definition The only differencein the definitionof the two equilibriais that with financialintegrationthere is a global marketfor bonds, and therefore, interestrates are equalized acrosscountries(condition[ii]).As a result, countriesmay have nonzero foreign asset positions. 6.2.2 Characterizationof the Equilibrium This section characterizesthe properties of the equilibriumwith and without internationalfinancialintegration.Toshow the importanceof financialdevelopment,we also consideran alternativeeconomywhere asset marketsare complete.This alternativeeconomy would featuretrade in a full set of claimsthatarecontingenton the realizationof the idiosyncraticshock.Firstwe look at the autarkyregimeand then the regimewith financialintegration.Inboth caseswe will contrastthe completemarkets setup with the environmentwhere marketsare incomplete. Consider first the economy with complete markets in financial au- On the WelfareImplicationsof Globalizationwithout Development 289 tarky. In this case, agents choose contingent claims b(et+1),physical capital kt+vand labor lt+v The first-order conditions are: U'(ct) = (1 + r()p{l7'[c(e(+1)]+ Me(+1)}, "'^ = u^'m Ve(+1 (5) PE(t/'[c(e(+1)]+ Met+1)} (6) WM>h+l) = *>t+l (7) where X(£,+1)*s *e Lagrange multiplier associated with the limited liability constraint (3). The first condition holds for any realization of et+1,which implies that next period consumption, c(e,+1),must be the same for all et+1(full inlt+1)/[l + surance). The first two conditions imply together that Fk(kt+1, = the + from return the 1 that is, productive asrt, marginal kt+1)] q>k(Kt, rate. interest to the is set (net of the adjustment cost) equal Together with condition (7), this implies that all agents choose the same inputs of capital and labor. The following lemma establishes that the condition p(l + r) = 1 holds in the steady state equilibrium with complete markets. Lemma 1. Consider the autarky regime and assume that there are complete markets.Then the steady state interest rate satisfies r = 1/p - 1. Proof 1. If P(l + r) = 1 is not satisfied, condition (5) implies that the consumption growth of all agents will be either positive or negative. This cannot be a steady state because aggregate consumption is not constant. Q.E.D Consider now the economy with incomplete markets, where only nonstate contingent claims are traded. The first-order conditions are: U'{ct) = (5(1 + rt) E[U'[c(et+1)]+ X(el+1)» (8) U'M= Jft+^\ (9) F,(^W*+i) = «W +x(£<-» PE«U' W^iM (10) = In this case we obtain again that Fk(kt+1, lt+1)/[l + %(Kt,kt+1)] l + rt, and the allocations of production inputs are the same for all agents. Individual consumption, however, is not constant but depends on the 290 Mendoza,Quadrini,and Rios-Rull realization of the efficiency units of labor. This is akin to the typical Bewley (1986)economy with uninsurablerisks and aggregateproduction. Because all agents use the same production inputs, they get the same investmentincome.As it is known fromthe savings literature(see Huggett 1993;Aiyagari1994;and Carroll1997),the uninsurabilityof the idiosyncratic risk generates precautionarysavings and in the steady state P(l + r) < 1. Lemma 2. Considerthe autarky regimeand assume that only noncontingent bondsare traded.Then the steady state interest rate satisfies rt < 1/(3 - 1. Proof 2. Suppose that (3(1+ rt)> 1. BecauseU'(.) is convex, condition (8) implies that for all agents the expected next period consumptionis bigger thancurrentconsumption.Therefore,next period aggregateconsumption will also be bigger than today's consumption,which cannot be a steady state equilibrium.Therefore,rt< 1/ p - 1. Q.E.D. Lemmas 1 and 2 establish that in autarkythe economy with incomplete marketshas a lower interestrate than the complete-marketseconomy, at least in the steady state. Suppose now that an economy with complete markets (country 1) becomes financially integrated with an incomplete-marketseconomy (country 2). The following proposition characterizesthe steady state equilibriumwith capitalmobility. Proposition 1. Suppose that country 1 has completemarketswhile in country 2 marketsare incomplete.In the steady state equilibriumwithfinancial integrationr < 1/p - 1 and country 1 accumulatesa negative netforeign asset position. Proof 1. Appendix A. The case of financialintegrationbetween a complete-marketseconomy and an incomplete-marketseconomy allowed us to establishanalyticalresults.Fromthese resultswe can inferthe propertiesof the equilibriumwhen marketsare incomplete in both countriesand a1< a2.In general,a highervalue of a leads to higher savings and thus reducesthe equilibrium interest rate in the autarky regime. Figure 6.1 shows the equilibriumof the model underautarkyand underfinancialintegration. The figure plots the aggregate supply of savings in each country as an increasing,concave function of r? Country 1 has deeper financialmar- On the Welfare Implications of Globalization without Development 291 Figure 6.1 Steady state equilibria with heterogeneous financial conditions kets (a1< a2),and hence lower supply of savings for each interestrate. Becausethe demand for productivecapital,which is inverselyrelatedto the interestrate,is the same in the two countries,country 1 must have a higher autarkyinterestratethan country2; that is, r1> r2. When the countriesbecome financiallyintegrated,the interest rates are equalized. Comparedto autarky,the interestrate and the supply of savings fall in country 1 and rise in country 2, and hence the country with deeper financial markets ends up with a negative foreign asset position. Moreover,the capitalstock rises relativeto its autarkylevel in country 1 and it falls in country 2. Thus, financialglobalization leads capital to flow from the less financiallydeveloped country to the more developed country. Interestingly,this relocation of capital is akin to those driven by country-specificimprovements in productivity or removal of distortions on capital accumulation,but here this is a byproductof global financialintegrationamongs countriesthat are identical except for a1< a2. 6.3 QuantitativeAnalysis In this section, we study the quantitativeproperties of the model in a two-countryversion calibratedto actual data. The first country is calibratedto representthe United Statesand the second the aggregateof all otherOrganizationforEconomicCooperationand Development(OECD) countriesplus emerging economies.4 The two countriesare assumed to differin populationand productivity so that we can match the actualpopulation size and per capitaGDP 292 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull observed in the data (using the WorldBank'sWorldDevelopment Indicain 1 The mass of is set to which is the actual 0.064, tors). agents country U.S. populationsharein the entireOECDand emergingeconomies.The mass of agents in country2 is then set to 0.936.The productivityparameters A1and A2are chosen so that the per capita GDP of the two countries in the steady state with capital mobility match the relative per capita GDP of the United Statesvis-a-vis the aggregateof other OECD and emerging economies. In 2005 the per capita GDP of this group of countries,compared to the United States,was 0.152.In the model, the relativeper capitaGDPof the two countriescanbe expressedas y1/y2 = Hence, normalizingA1 = 1, the model matches the rela(A1M2)1/(1"ev). tive per capitaGDP of the countriesin the databy settingA2= 0.1521~8v. After setting v = 0.9 and 0 = 0.289, as specified below, we get A2 = 0.248. This calibrationof the relative population and productivity implies that the model matchesthe U.S. share of total GDP for the aggregateof OECDand emerging economies, which in 2005was about 31 percentat currentexchangerates.Notice that it is the sharein total GDP that matters for the quantitativeresults. Whetherthe 31 percent share derives from differencesin population size, productivity,or both, is irrelevant for the economic consequencesof liberalization.5 Forthe calibrationof the productionfunction,we firstset the returnsto-scalecoefficientto v = 0.9 and then we choose 6 to matcha capitalincome shareof 0.36.Becausethe capitalincome shareis 1 - v(l - 6) = 0.36, this requires8 = 0.289.The depreciationrate is set to 8 = 0.06 and the subjective discount factor is chosen to produce a capital-outputratio of 3 in the steady state with capital mobility.This requirementimplies (3= 0.949.We set the adjustmentcost parameterto <|>= 0.6, which is the value used by Kehoe and Perri (2002) to match the observed cyclical variabilityof investmentin industrialcountries.6The coefficientof relative risk aversionparameterin the utility functionis set to a = 2. The stochastic endowment of labor efficiency follows a two-state Markovprocess, e = e(l ± Ae),with symmetric transitionprobability matrix. We calibrate this process to match recent estimates of the U.S. earningprocess by setting the persistenceprobabilityto 0.975and Ae= 0.6.Thesevalues imply thatlog-earningsdisplay a first-orderautocorrelationof 0.95 and a standarddeviation of 0.3, which is in the range of values estimatedby Storesletten,Telmer,and Yaron(2004). The remaining parametersthat need to be calibratedare the lower bounds for net worth, a1and a2.These are set to replicatethe volume of OntheWelfareImplications of Globalization withoutDevelopment 293 domesticcreditto the privatesector,in percentageof GDP,observedfor the United Statesand the aggregateof otherOECDand emergingeconomies. Accordingto the 2005 WorldDevelopment Indicators,this variable was 195percentfor the United Statesand 119percentfor the aggregate of the othercountries.Wereplicatethese values in the steady state with capitalmobilityby setting a1= -2.6 and a2= -0.02. 63.1 TheMacroeconotnicImplications of Financial Integration We conduct a simple exerciseto study the consequencesof capitalmarkets liberalization.Wederivethe effectsof a completeand unanticipated removalof barriersto financialasset tradingbetween countries1 and 2, startingfroma preliberalizationequilibriumin which the two countries are in the autarkysteady state.7 Figure6.2 plots the transitiondynamics of key macroeconomicvari- Figure 6.2 Transition dynamics of macroeconomics variables 294 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull ables from the autarkysteady state to the new steady state under capital markets integration.Except for the interest rate, the dynamics are shown as percentdeviations relativeto the autarkysteady state in each country.Country 1 startswith a higher interestrate than country2 (3.1 percentversus 2.6 percent).This is a consequenceof the lower preliberalization savings of country 1 because of the weaker borrowing constraint.As soon as capitalmarketsare opened, the two interestratesare equalized at 2.76 percent. After that, the world interest rate rises only slightly.As a resultof the lower interestraterelativeto autarky,the stock of physical capitalin country 1 increases.The opposite occurs in country 2.8Thetwo stocksof capitalconvergeto the postliberalizationsteady state,but the convergenceis gradualbecause of the adjustmentcost. As shown in the next section, the convergencewithout the adjustmentcost would be much faster. The dynamicsof outputs and wages follow fromthe dynamicsof capital: as country 1 increases the stock of capital, output and wages increase.The opposite arises in country2. The dynamics of interestrates and wages will be key for understandingthe welfare consequencediscussed following. Figure 6.3 plots the transitiondynamics for the externalaccounts in percent of each country'sdomestic output. The first panel shows that country 1 accumulatesa large stock of net foreign liabilities.In the long run these liabilities reach 81 percent of GDP.This is a gradual process that takes more than forty years.9 The remainingpanels of figure 6.3 display the flow transactionsstarting with the currentaccount balance. The currentaccount falls into a large deficitclose to 5 percentof GDP on impact and stays negative until it converges to zero in the long run. Net exports also decline sharply. The tradebalanceremainsin deficit during the early stages of the transition but it shifts into a surplus in the postliberalizationsteady state. This surplus is necessaryto service the foreign debt (see the plot showing the factor payments). Note that both the currentaccount and the tradebalancesatisfy world equilibriumconditionsbecause country1 is about 31 percentof the world's GDP (e.g., a currentaccountdeficit of 5 percentin countryl's GDPcorresponds,approximately,by a 2.2percent surplus in country2). Sincethe responsesof the externalaccountsto financialintegrationresult fromthe responsesof investmentand savings, the last two panels of figure 6.3 decompose the currentaccount into these two components. From the national accountingidentity we have that CA = S-I, where CAis the currentaccountbalance,S nationalsavings, and I domesticin- On the Welfare Implications of Globalization without Development 295 Figure 6.3 Transitiondynamicsof foreignaccountvariables vestment. In terms of deviation from the preliberalizationsteady state, this identity can be written as ACA= AS - AI,where AG4 is the deviation of the currentaccountfrom the steady state value (which is zero). Similarly,AS and A/ are the deviations of savings and investment from the steady state values. Thebottompanels of figure6.3 plot these two variables.The fall (rise) 296 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull in the currentaccountbalanceof country1 (country2) derives fromboth an increase (fall) in investment and a decline (rise) in savings. This follows from the fact that the interestratein country 1 (country2) declines (rises) after liberalization.Lower interest rates encourage investment but discourage savings. The opposite occurs in country 2. During the first few periods after liberalization,the contributionof savings to the currentaccountimbalanceis of similarmagnitudeas the contributionof investment. The macroeconomicdynamics illustrated in figures 6.2 and 6.3 are qualitativelysimilar to those obtained in internationalrepresentativeagent neoclassicalmodels in response to the unilateralremoval of distortionson capitalaccumulation(see Mendozaand Tesar1998),or when financialintegrationleads to a change in tax structureas a consequence of increasedtax competition(see Quadrini2005).Representative-agent models, however, are silent about the distributionaleffects of financial liberalization.Our setup instead allows us to investigate how the welfare consequences of globalization are distributedamong the population of each country.As we will see, some agents gain greatly while others are negatively affected. 6.3.2 TheWelfareConsequencesof Liberalization We study next the welfare implicationsof financialintegration.In the model, agents are ex-ante identical but ex-post heterogeneous in asset holdings and earningabilities.As a result,the welfareeffectsof financial integrationare differentfor each agent depending on their position in the initial distributionof wealth and earningabilities. The top panels of figure 6.4 plot the steady state wealth distributions in the autarkysteady state. Since there are two realizationsof earnings, the distributionover net worth is plotted separatelyfor agents with low and high earning abilities.As can be seen, a large share of agents have very low levels of wealth, in particularamong those with low earning ability.The lower level of financialdevelopment in country 2 prevents agents in this countryfrombuilding largenet debt positions,but results in a large mass of agents aroundthe lower bound for assets. Thebottom panels of figure6.4 show the bond holdings bt+1as a function of net worth at in the autarkysteady state. Physical capital is the same for all agentswithin each countrybecausethey all choose the same kt+1.The importantpoint to note is that agents with lower assets choose negative values of bt+1;that is, they borrow.It is then easy to see how On the WelfareImplicationsof Globalizationwithout Development 297 Figure 6.4 Wealth distributions and portfolio composition changes in the interest rate triggered by financial globalization affect these agents:they gain froma reductionin the interestratebut they lose when the interestrateincreases. Figure6.5 plots the distributionsof the welfare effects of financialintegrationin countries1 and 2 as a functionof initialnet worth, a, and for differentinitial earningabilities,e. The welfare effects are computed as the proportionalincreasein consumptionin the autarkysteady state,g, that would make each individual agent indifferentbetween remaining in financialautarky(FA)or shiftingto the regime with financialintegration (FT).In the second case agents would experiencethe transitiondynamics from the preliberalizationsteady state to the steady state with capital mobility.Formally,for each agent ;',who is identified by initial states (e, a), the welfare gain from capital markets liberalizationis the value of gj that solves: Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull 298 Figure 6.5 Welfare gains of liberalization t=0 t=0 where (ftAis agent/'s consumptionunder the autarkysteady state and cfJ is agent/'s consumptionwhen the economy is liberalizedat time 0, starting from the autarkysteady state. Because of the homotheticityof the utility function,the previous equationcan also be written as: (l+g>y-°VFA(e,a) = V»(e,a), and V"are the value functionsunder financialautarkyand fiwhere VFA nancialintegration. As shown in figure 6.5, in country 1 the welfare gains decreasewith On the Welfare Implications of Globalization without Development 299 initial wealth and at some point they become negative. The opposite holds trueforcountry2, where (initially)pooreragentsexperiencea loss fromcapitalmarketsliberalization. As suggested previously,these welfare findings are a consequenceof the changes in interestratesafterfinancialmarketsintegration.The decline in the interestrate relativeto autarkyin country 1 is beneficialfor pooreragentsbecause,as shown in the previous figure,they arenet borrowers.At the same time, theirwages increasebecauseof the increasein the input of capital.On the other hand, wealthy agents are net lenders and a small part of their income derives from wages. It is then not surprising that they lose from a fall in the interestrate.The opposite is true in country2 where the interestrateincreasesafterfinancialmarketsintegration.Pooreragents in country 2 are also borrowers,but for them the increasein the interestrate raises the cost of servicing the debt. On the otherhand, richeragents in country2 benefit from the higher interest payments.Becausea smallershareof income is derived fromwages, the benefit from higher interestpayments more than compensates the lower wages. The question we ask next is whether the welfare consequences of those gaining from liberalizationoffset the negative effects for those experiencing losses. We address this question by assuming, for each country,a social welfare functionthat assigns equal weight to all agents residing in the country.This can be interpretedas the utility of a benevolent country planner that assigns the same weight to each agent. The aggregatewelfare gain is computed as the proportionalincrease in the autarkyconsumptionof all agentsthatmakesthe plannerindifferentbetween remainingin autarky (but with the consumption increase) and liberalizing.For country i, the aggregatewelfare gain is the value of Q that solves: *)M'(e, a). a)= JMV£'(e, V*(e,a)M'(e, (1+ GO1"' JM In this aggregate welfare measure, the percentage increase in consumption is the same for all agents within each country.Therefore,this is also the percentageincreasein aggregateconsumption.Theaggregate welfare gains are 1.7 percentin country1 and -0.4 percentin country2. Hence, financial integration produces a substantial welfare gain for country1 and a nontrivialloss for country2. Tounderstandthese aggregatewelfareresults,it is useful to look back at the preliberalizationdistributionsof wealth plotted in figure 6.4. Because most of the agents are concentratedon the left-hand side of the 300 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull distributions,the aggregatewelfare effects are dominatedby the gains and losses of the poorer agents. As a result,country 1 gains on average while country2 is on averageworse off. These welfare results have some common elements with the normative results of Davila, Hong, Krusell,and Rios-Rull(2005),who study the constrainedoptimal allocation chosen by a benevolent planner in a one-sector neoclassic growth model with uninsurable idiosyncratic shocks.In this environment,the plannercan only affectthe relativewellbeing of differenthouseholds using changes in relative prices and not individualized transfers.They find that the plannerwould be willing to induce large changes in the capital stock. In particular,in a calibrated model where the poor households have an income composition that is labor intensive, the plannerwould choose a stock of capitalthat is bigger than in the laissez-faireworld. In our environmentthereis a related mechanismat work;a reductionin the capitalstock and the consequent increasein the interestrate(whichis what happens in country2 afterliberalization)is undesirablebecause it tilts the prices againstthe poor. Weconclude the welfare analysisby decomposing the welfare effects caused by capital reallocation,which also arise in representativeagent models, fromthose causedby the distributionaleffectsof financialglobalization.Tomake the decomposition,we conduct the following experiment. As in the previous section, we consider a full and unanticipated liberalizationof capital marketsstartingfrom the autarkysteady state. However, we do not allow agents to reoptimize the input of physical capital and continue to use the same inputs they were using in the autarky equilibrium.This is equivalent to assuming that the adjustment cost is infinitelylarge. Although the stocks of capital in the two countriesremainthe same, the interest rates are equalized immediately.This leads to a change in savings similar to the one obtained in the previous section. Therefore, country 1 startsborrowingfrom country2 and accumulatesforeign asset liabilities.The distributionof welfare gains among the populationof the two countriesis also very similar:the poor in country 1 gain while the poor in country2 lose. Theaggregatewelfaregain for country1 is 2.2 percentand for country2 is -0.74 percent.Therefore,without capitalreallocation,the welfare losses for country2 are larger(0.74versus 0.41). By allowing capital to be efficientlyreallocated,the losses are reduced somewhat but not completely.In country 1, instead, the gains are even largerwithout capitalreallocation(2.2versus 1.55).Clearly,the welfare On the WelfareImplicationsof Globalizationwithout Development 301 consequences coming from the redistributional impact of globalization dominate the welfare consequences from capital reallocation. 6.3.3 The Distributional Consequences of Liberalization In addition to the aggregate and distributional welfare effects of liberalization explored in the previous subsection, financial integration affects the distribution of wealth within each country. Figure 6.6 plots the Gird index for the distribution of net worth a in each country. Before liberalization, the Gird index is about 66 percent in country 1 and 48 percent in country 2. The higher Gird in country 1 is explained by the lower borrowing limit: because of the higher ability to borrow, a significant fraction of agents in country 1 end up with large liabilities, leading to a high concentration of wealth. Agents in country 2 have tighter borrowing constraints, and therefore, they cannot accumulate very large liabilities. As the two countries liberalize, the concentration of wealth increases gradually in country 1 and in the long run the Gini index reaches the Figure 6.6 Implicationsof liberalizationfor the dynamicsof the distributionsof wealth 302 Mendoza,Quadrini,andRios-Rull value of 0.73. In country 2, instead, the Gini index remains almost the same. These changes are a directconsequenceof the changes in interest ratesafterliberalization. Consider first country 1. Liberalizationinduces a fall in the interest rate (relativelyto the autarkyrate),which reduces the incentiveto save. As a result of the lower savings, a largerfractionof agents borrowup to the limit, and therefore,more agents end up with large liabilities.This patternis consistentwith the increasein inequalityobservedin the U.S. economy in recentyears, at least for the partgeneratedby the higherindebtedness of the household sector. Forcountry2, instead, liberalizationleads to an increasein the interest rate. Because of this, savings tend to raise and fewer agents hit the borrowing limit. This should decrease inequality. At the same time, however, a higher interestratereducesthe incomes of those borrowing; that is, the poorer agents. This featuretends to keep more agents closer to the borrowing limit. For our parametrization,the two effects are of similarmagnitude and the Gini index does not change much. Interestingly,the limited dataavailableon the evolution of Ginicoefficientsover the last twenty years also show small changes in the majorityof emerging economies. Using the income distribution data available in the World Bank'sWorldDevelopmentIndicators,we found that the median acrossemergingeconomiesof the changebetween the most recentvalue of the Ginicoefficient(generallyfor2003)and the values reportedforthe mid-1980s (mainly for 1984 through 1986 depending on the country) was about 1 percentagepoint. In typical emerging countrieslike Brazil, Malaysia,Mexico,and Turkey,the changesin the Gini coefficientsrange between -0.9 and 0.5 percentagepoints. 6.4 Sensitivity Analysis This section examines the robustnessof our findings to changes in the specificationof capitaladjustmentcosts and the relativesize of the countries'borrowingconstraints(differencesin financialdevelopment). In the baselinemodel we assumed thatthe capitaladjustmentcost depends on the aggregatecapitalstock.We want to show now that the results arerobustto using a standardadjustmentcost functioncp(fcf, kt+1)= ~ • <|>(kt+1/kt I)2'where ktis the individualstock of capital.The optimization problem is similar to problem (4) but the argumentsof the value functionnow include kt;that is, V(et,at,kt).The first-orderconditionsfor OntheWelfareImplications of Globalization withoutDevelopment 303 bond holdings and labordo not change. The first-ordercondition with respectto physical capital,however, is now slightly different: The last termcapturesthe effectof capitalaccumulationon futureadjustmentcosts. In the previous formulationthis termwas ignoredby individual agents because it was externalto their optimizationproblem. This additionalterm makes the analysis more complicated.In particular,it is no longer the case that all agents choose the same input of capi> 0) will choose a lower adjusttal. Agents that are constrained(X[ef+1] ment of capital to increasecurrentconsumption. As a result, they will have a differentstock of capitalthanunconstrainedagents.This implies that in the economy therewill be a nondegeneratedistributionof physical capitalin addition to net worth and earningabilities. Figure6.7 reportsthe transitiondynamics aftercapitalmarketsliberalizationwhen we use this new specificationof the adjustmentcost. The parameter§ is set to the same value used in the baselinemodel (i.e.,0.6). The figure also reports the transitiondynamics for the baseline model analyzed earlier and for the economy without adjustment cost. For economy of space we reportonly the dynamics for country 1. Thenew specificationof the adjustmentcost leads to a fasterreallocation of capital compared to the baseline model. This is because now agents internalizethat higher reallocationtoday reduces the cost of future reallocations.Consequently,the adjustmentis faster.Without adjustmentcost the marginalproductivityof capitalis immediatelyequalized to the interestrate.Withadjustmentcosts, instead, the equalization arisesonly in the long run.Butbeyond the differencesin the speed of adjustment,the qualitativepropertiesof the model do not change and, as reportedin table6.1, the welfare numbersare very similar. Anothersensitivity exercisewe conduct involves the lower bound a, which representsdifferences in financialmarkets development. Table 6.2 reportsthe welfare consequenceswhen the two economies are characterizedby differentvalues of a. In the firstrow we reportthe baseline model. In the second we decrease the bound for country 1, and in the thirdwe decreasethe bound for country2. Figure 6.7 Transitiondynamicsfor differentadjustmentcosts in country1 305 On the WelfareImplicationsof Globalizationwithout Development Table 6.1 Welfaregains for differentadjustmentcost functions(percentof consumption) Modelwithoutadjustmentcost Modelwith individualadjustmentcost Modelwith aggregateadjustmentcost (baseline) Country1 Country2 1.55 1.60 1.67 -0.34 -0.37 -0.41 Table 6.2 Welfaregains for differentbounds on assets (percentof consumption) Interestrate(autarky) Welfaregains Lowerbounds on assets (a\a2) Country1 Country2 Country1 Country2 (-2.6, -0.02) (baseline) H.0,-0.02) (-2.6,-0.30) (-2.6,0.00) (-2.6,0.23) (-2.6,0.30) (-2.6,0.46) 3.08 3.25 3.08 3.08 3.08 3.08 3.08 2.62 2.62 3.00 2.59 2.14 1.95 1.53 1.67 3.02 0.35 1.76 3.00 4.00 5.60 -0.41 -0.58 -0.13 -0.43 -0.50 -0.36 -0.08 Largerdifferencesbetween the lower bounds lead to largerwelfare effects. For example, when we decrease the limit for country 1 to -4.0 (keepingthe limit of country2 unaltered),the gains of country1 and the losses of country2 increaseby a factorof 1.8 and 1.4,respectively.When we decreasethe limit for country2 from -0.02 to -0.3 (makingthe limit closer to country 1), the welfare consequencesbecome less than half.10 So, in general, what matters is how much the borrowing limits differ acrosscountries. Weshould also point out thatthe welfareconsequencesfor the less developed countrydo not change monotonicallywith the tightness of the financialconstraint.As shown in the lower section of table 6.2, after a certainpoint, the welfarelosses for country2 startto decline with tighter constraints. Thisresultis easy to understandif we use the law of motion forwealth (equation[2])to rewritethe financialconstraintas follows: + bt+1> a. + F(kt+1, lt+1) lt+1wt+1 et+1wt+1 Fromthis expression,it is easy to see thatthe lower limit on at+1imposes a lower limit on bt+rBecauseall agents choose the same productionin- Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull 306 puts kt+1and lt+1,high values of a reduce the maximumleverage.Then, an increasein the interestrate in country 2 following the liberalization of capital marketscannot have large welfare costs for poor agents because they are not very leveraged.Effectively,higher values of a reduce the inequality in the distributionof wealth with consequent reduction in the redistributionalconsequencesof capitalmarketsliberalization.In the extremecase in which a is so high that bt+1is zero for all agents, the welfare consequencesof liberalizationbecome positive also for country 2. In this case only the efficiencygains fromcapitalreallocationarise.Of course, this is an extremecase of limited empiricalrelevance. Regardingcountry 1, the welfare gains increasemonotonicallywith the reductionin the financialdeepness of country2. This is because the integrationwith less financially developed countries implies a larger drop in the interestrate. The last sensitivity exerciseis with respectto the volatilityof individual laborefficiencies.Laborefficienciescan taketwo values and the proportionaldeviation from the mean, Ae,was set to 0.6 in both countries. Wenow allow the two countriesto have differentvolatilitiesof earnings. Table6.3 reportsthe welfare consequenceswhen the two economies are characterizedby different values of Ae.In the first row we report the baseline model. In the second and third rows we change the earnings volatility in country 1, and in the fourth and fifth rows we change the earningsvolatility in country2. Lower (higher)volatility of earningsleads to lower (higher)savings, and therefore,a higher (lower) interestrate in the autarkyequilibrium. The largerthe interestrate differentialbefore capitalliberalization,the largerthe welfare consequencesfromliberalizing.In otherwords, liberalization brings higher welfare gains or lower welfare losses as we reduce the relativevolatility of individual earnings. Table6.3 Welfaregains for differentvolatilityof earnings(percentof consumption) „ . ... of, Volatility earnings (AJ,A*) Interestrate(autarky) Country1 Country2 Country1 Country2 (0.60,0.60)(baseline) (0.55,0.60) (0.65,0.60) (0.60,0.55) (0.60,0.65) 3.08 3.41 2.73 3.08 3.08 2.62 2.62 2.62 3.00 2.22 1.67 2.64 0.43 0.29 3.21 -0.41 -0.69 -0.10 -0.06 -0.83 Welfaregains On the Welfare Implications of Globalization without Development 307 The results reportedin rows 2 and 5 are of particularinterest.These are the cases in which agents in country 1 face lower volatility of earnings comparedto agents in country2 (in addition to a weaker borrowing constraint).This is anotherway of capturing,in reduced form, the higher financialdeepness of country1. In the currentpaper we have assumed that financialmarketdifferencesare only capturedby the borrowing limits. More generally,however, financialdevelopment is also associatedwith the availabilityof a largervariety of contracts,like derivatives,thatareessentiallystate-contingentand provide some formof insurance.Becausegreaterinsurancereducesthe need of precautionary savings, liberalizationleads to largerimbalancesand largerwelfareconsequences.This is the approachwe have taken in Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull(2007),where the availabilityof insuranceis determined endogenously by the degree of contractenforceability. The case of cross-countrydifferencesin the volatility of earnings is also relevant for understanding the internationalflow of capital between industrializedand emerging economies. The economic transformation experiencedby emerging economies allowed these countriesto experiencefaster growth. At the same time, rapid transformationsare also likely to induce greateruncertaintyat the individual level. Therefore,we have two opposing effects on the internationalflows of capital. On the one hand emerging economies should be net importersof capitalbecausefastergrowth induceshigherinvestments.On the other,they should be net exportersbecause the economic transformationsthat allow for fastergrowth also induce highersavings. Togetherwith the poor development of their financial markets, the saving effect is likely to dominatethe investmenteffect in these countries.It is then not surprising to see a net flow of capitalgoing from emerging economies toward industrializedcountries.See also endnote 9 on this point. 6.5 Policy Implications One importantresultwe obtainedfrom the welfare analysis of financial liberalizationis that in country 2- the country with less developed financialmarkets- the aggregatewelfare consequencesare negative. In this sectionwe ask whetherthereis a simple domesticpolicy that,when applied in conjunctionwith financialliberalization,can make the aggregate welfareconsequencespositive for country2 (in addition to country 1). Of course, there are many policies we can think of. Here we simply considera once-and-for-allredistributivetax on wealth. Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull 308 Table 6.4 Welfaregains fromliberalizationwhen country2 implementsa one-timewealth redistribution (percentof consumption) Taxrate(%) 0.0 1.0 2.5 5.0 Initialwealth Gird afterredistribution in country2 Welfaregains country1 Welfaregains country2 0.482 0.477 0.470 0.458 1.67 1.64 1.61 1.56 -0.41 -0.20 0.12 0.62 Suppose that at time zero, just before liberalization,the government imposes a tax on net worth a and redistributesthe revenues as lumpsum transfers.Formally,V = j^YaM^e,a), where V is the lump-sum transfer,t1the wealth tax rate,and i is the index for the country.This redistributivetax is applied only at time zero and it is not anticipated.We tried differenttax rates for country 2 and the aggregatewelfare results are reportedin table 6.4. As more wealth is redistributedinitially,and hence there is less initial inequality,the aggregatewelfare consequencesimprove. A 2.5 percent tax rateis sufficientto turn the aggregatewelfare cost of liberalization in country 2 into a welfare gain. The welfare gain is further improved by increasingthe tax rate. It is also interestingto note that the redistributivetax in country 2 has almost no effect on the welfare of country 1. 6.6 Conclusion This paper studied the welfare and distributionalconsequencesof capital marketsliberalizationamong countriesthat areheterogeneousin financial development. We found that if financialglobalizationdoes not lead to financialdevelopment, it can result in adverse effects for the social welfare of the less developed countries.The quantitativeanalysis shows that these effects are large and may justifypolicy intervention. These conclusionswere obtainedby studying the quantitativeimplications of a two-countrymodel with heterogenousagents and uninsurable idiosyncraticrisks. Marketincompleteness derives from the unavailability of state-contingentcontracts and limits to the amount of borrowing.Countriesare heterogenousin the degree of financialdevelopment capturedby the tightness of the borrowing limits. A baseline On the Welfare Implications of Globalization without Development 309 simulationcalibratedto the United Statesand an aggregateof the rest of the OECD countries plus emerging economies, showed that financial globalizationwithout financialdevelopment leads to an aggregatewelfaregain of 1.7 percentin the United Statesand a loss of -0.4 percentin the aggregateof the other countries.This occursbecause, relative to financialautarky,the integrationof capital marketsincreasesthe cost of borrowingto poor agentsin the less financiallydeveloped countriesand lowers it in the more financially developed country. Moreover, the model predicts that financialglobalizationwithout financialdevelopment has adverse effects on wealth inequality.It worsens the distribution of wealth in the United States and fails to reduce inequality in the othercountries. If financialintegrationleads to fasterconvergencein the development of financialmarkets,then therecouldbe net benefitsforthe countriesthat are less financiallydeveloped. This is more likely to happen in the long run. In the short run, fiscalpolicies can play a useful role in redistributing the gains and losses. We found that a redistributionof initialwealth in countrieswith lower financialdevelopment can make the aggregate welfareconsequencesfromliberalizationpositive for all countries. Acknowledgments This paper was prepared for the NBER's InternationalSeminar on Macroeconomics(ISOM),Istanbul,June 15-16, 2007. We would like to thank GiancarloCorsetti and Mehmet Yorokoglufor insightful comments.Financialsupportfromthe NationalScienceFoundationis gratefully acknowledged. Notes 1. This assumption is typical in international real business cycle models and is used there for the same reason; that is, to make the reallocation of capital sluggish. 2. The asset market structure and the treatment of financial heterogeneity in this model are less general than the ones in the MQR setup. In MQR we allow for a full set of statecontingent assets that are constrained by an enforcement constraint. Here, instead, we allow only for nonstate-contingent assets. With earnings shocks only, the two market structures lead to similar results. With investment shocks, however, the two market structures have different implications for the composition of portfolio. Because in this paper we abstract from investment shocks, we decided to adopt the simpler specification. 3. The savings supply curves in figure 6.1 correspond to the well-known aggregate savings curve from the closed-economy heterogenous agents literature (e.g., Aiyagari 1994). 310 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull Aggregate savings converge to infinity as the interest rate approaches the rate of time preference from below, because agents need an infinite amount of precautionary savings to attain a nonstochastic consumption profile. The demand of savings is downward sloping because of the diminishing marginal productivity of capital. 4. The emerging economies are Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Taiwan, Uruguay, and Venezuela. In general, these are the developing countries that today are most active in international financial markets. Because the OECD and the emerging economies represent a very large share of world output, the inclusion of all other countries would not make a big difference for the quantitative results. 5. With proper rescaling of the limited liability constraints, a\ different combinations of populations and productivities that keep the same relative aggregate GDP of the two countries constant do not affect the autarky interest rates. The postliberalization interest rate will be closer to the autarky interest rate of the country with the larger economy, independently of whether this derives from a larger population or a higher productivity. 6. Capital adjustment costs are widely used in international real business cycle (RBC) models, but there is no consensus on the calibration strategy to parameterize them. For example, Baxter and Crucini (1993) calibrated the elasticity of investment relative to Tobin's q to match investment variability in industrial countries. Chari, Kehoe, and McGrattan to match the relative variability of consumption to out(2000) calibrated the parameter <(> put. Kehoe and Perri (2002) targeted the variability of investment. 7. In reality, the process of financial globalization has been gradual. However, the effects of gradual financial integration are easy to infer from those of the immediate liberalization. The transitional dynamics of the gradual liberalization would spread over time the impact of the immediate liberalization. 8. Interestingly, the investment rate in the emerging countries of South East Asia (excluding China) fell by 10 percentage points of GDP in 1998 and this decline has persisted for a decade. The initial drop can be attributed to the Asian crisis, but the persistence of the decline suggests that there was also some structural change at play. 9. The model's predictions are again in line with the current situation in the world economy where poorer and less financially developed countries are net lenders to more developed countries, particularly the United States. We should also notice, however, that these countries are experiencing faster growth than industrialized countries. With growth differences, the predictions of our model are similar to those of a typical open economy neoclassical model; that is, fast growing countries should be net importers of capital. Therefore, once we consider growth differences between emerging and industrialized countries, the net flow of capital will be determined by two opposing forces: growth differences lead to an inflow toward emerging economies while financial markets differences lead to an inflow toward industrialized countries. Given that the degree of financial development in emerging economies is so far behind the one in industrialized economies, we believe that the financial channel still dominates the growth channel so that the net flow continues to be directed toward industrialized countries. 10. The lower bound for country 2 is not directly comparable to country 1 because country 1 has a higher per capita income. To make the bound comparable, we should rescale it by the per capita income ratio of the two countries. Because the ratio is 0.152, the bound for country 2, a2 = -0.3, corresponds to -0.3/0.152 = -1.97 in country 1. Hence, financial On the WelfareImplicationsof Globalizationwithout Development 311 integration would be neutral if a2 = -0.3952, because this corresponds to -0.3952/0.152 = -2.6, which is the limit for country 1 in the baseline calibration. References Aiyagari, S. R. 1994. Uninsured idiosyncratic risk, and aggregate saving. QuarterlyJournal of Economics109:659-84. Backus, D. K., P.J. Kehoe, and F.Kydland. 1992. International business cycles. Journalof Political Economy100 (4): 745-75. Baxter, M., and M. J. Crucini. 1993. Explaining saving-investment correlations. American EconomicReview 83 (3): 416-36. Bewley, T. 1986. Stationary monetary equilibrium with a continuum of independently fluctuating consumers. In Contributionsto MathematicalEconomicsin Honorof GerardDebreu,ed. W. Hildenbrand, and A. Mas-Colell, pp. 79-102. Amsterdam: North Holland. Bhagwati, J. 2004. In defenseof globalization.New York:Oxford University Press. Carroll, C. D. 1997. Buffer-stock saving and the lifecycle/permanent income hypothesis. QuarterlyJournalof Economics112 (1): 1-55. Chart, V. V., P. Kehoe, and E. McGrattan. 2000. Sticky price models of the business cycle: Can the contract multiplier solve the persistence problem? Econometrica68 (5): 1151-80. Clarida, R. H. 1990. International lending and borrowing in a stochastic stationary equilibrium. InternationalEconomicReview 31 (3): 543-58. Davila, J., J. H. Hong, P. Krusell, and J.-V. Rios-Rull. 2005. Constrained efficiency in the neoclassical growth model with uninsurable idiosyncratic shocks. Cahiers de la Maison des Sciences Economiques b05066, University Panth&m-Sorbonne. Frankel, J. 2007. New perspectives on financial globalization. Panel presentation at International Monetary Fund (IMF) conference, 27 April. Gourinchas, P.-O., and O. Jeanne. 2006. The elusive gains from international financial integration. Reviewof EconomicStudies 73 (3): 1-31. Huggett, M. 1993. The risk free rate in heterogeneous-agents, incomplete insurance economies. Journalof EconomicDynamics and Control17 (5/6): 953-70. Kehoe, P. J., and F. Perri. 2002. International business cycles with endogenous incomplete markets. Econometrica70 (3): 907-28. Mendoza, E. 1991. Capital controls and the dynamic gains from trade in a business cycle model of a small open economy. IMF Staff Papers 38 (September): 480-505. Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund. Mendoza, E. G, V. Quadrini, and J.-V. Rios-Rull. 2007. Financial integration, financial deepness, and global imbalances. NBER Working Paper no. 12909. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, February. Mendoza, E. G and L. L. Tesar. 1998. The international ramifications of tax reforms: Supply-side economics in a global economy. AmericanEconomicReview 88 (1): 226-45. Mishkin, F. S. 2006. The next greatglobalization.Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. 312 Mendoza, Quadrini, and Rios-Rull Obstfeld, M., and A. M. Taylor. 2004. Globalcapital markets:Integration,crisis, and growth. New York:Cambridge University Press. Quadrini, V. 2005. Policy commitment and the welfare gains from capital market liberalization. EuropeanEconomicReview 49 (8): 1927-51. Rajan, R., and L. Zingales. 2003. Saving capitalismfrom the capitalists:Unleashingthepowerof financial marketsto createwealth and spreadopportunity.New York:Crown Business. Soros, G. 2002. On globalization.New York:Public Affairs Books. Stiglitz, J. E. 2002. Globalizationand its discontents.New York:W. W. Norton and Company. Storesletten, K., C. Telmer, and A. Yaron. 2004. Cyclical dynamics in idiosyncratic labormarket risk. Journalof Political Economy112 (3): 695-717. Appendix Proof of Proposition 1 In both economies we have that in the steady state Fk(K,L) = 1 + r. Because with capitalmobility there is a single worldwide interestrate,all agents employ the same input of capital in steady state. We want to show that the steady state interestrateis smallerthan the intertemporal discount rate. Suppose, on the contrary,that ($(1+ r) > 1. Under this condition agents in country 1 will have nonnegative consumption growth (see Lemma 1) and agents in country 2 will have positive consumption growth (see Lemma 2). This implies that worldwide consumption growth is positive, which cannot be a steady state equilibrium. Therefore,the equilibriummust satisfy 0(1 + rt)< 1. Under this condition, agents in country 1 will experience negative consumption growth (see againLemma1).Therefore,consumptionin country1 keeps fallinguntil the limited liabilityconstraint(3)binds for all agents;thatis, the net worth equals a1under the lower realizationof the earningshock. Becausecountry1 holds the same amountof Kas country2, the binding constraintfornet worth implies thatcountry1 has a negative net foreign asset position. Q.E.D.