VoxEU Column International Finance

Financial globalisation and productivity growth

There is a vast empirical literature analysing the impact of financial openness on economic growth but far less attention has been paid to its effects on productivity growth. This is surprising given the strong evidence that productivity growth is the main driver of long-term economic growth. This column argues that financial openness in fact has a positive impact on productivity growth, although the effects are subtle.

Theoretical models posit a number of channels through which openness to international financial flows ought to increase economic growth. However, there is little robust empirical evidence of a causal link between these two variables (see Obstfeld, 2008). If the growth benefits of financial openness are so elusive in the data, is it worthwhile for developing and emerging market economies to expose themselves to the risks associated with financial globalisation?

This question is clearly a matter of considerable policy relevance, especially with major economies like China and India recently taking steps to open up their capital accounts. The financial crisis has further sharpened the focus on this question as many emerging market economies have been caught up in the turmoil. This will no doubt lead to a re-evaluation of the costs and benefits of financial globalisation once the dust settles.

Interestingly, while many empirical studies have looked at the impact of financial openness on GDP growth, far less attention has been paid to its impact on productivity growth. There are at least two reasons why this latter relationship is of interest. First, there is strong evidence that productivity growth is the main driver of long-term per capita income growth (see Hall and Jones, 1999). Second, a new literature proposes that the main benefits of financial openness may be indirect and unrelated to the quantum of net capital inflows. Instead, financial openness matters because it has the potential to catalyse development of the domestic financial sector, improvements in institutions, and better macroeconomic policies. These factors should improve allocative efficiency and, by extension, total factor productivity (TFP) growth.

In new research, we examine the relationship between financial openness and TFP growth using an extensive dataset that includes various measures of financial openness and covers a large sample of developed and less developed countries (see Kose, Prasad and Terrones, 2008). Our total factor productivity measure is derived from a standard growth accounting framework. To measure financial openness, we employ both de jure and de facto measures. While the de jure measure is based on the extent of restrictions on capital account transactions, the de facto measure is more of an outcome-based indicator of integration based on the ratio of gross stocks of external liabilities to GDP. This distinction is important because countries with capital controls may still experience large inflows and outflows, while some countries with fully open capital accounts may in fact have little actual integration into world financial markets.

Basic facts

We first examine some basic stylised facts about the relationship between the degree of financial openness and TFP growth. For this analysis, we divide our sample into two coarse groups – more financially open economies and less financially open economies. The group of more financially open economies economies includes those with above-median levels of financial openness and less financially open economies are those with below-median levels. For each of these groups, we show how average long-term growth in output per worker can be split up into the shares attributable to TFP growth, physical capital accumulation (K/Y) and human capital accumulation (H).

TFP growth has typically been higher in more financially open economies over the last four decades. This difference is more pronounced when we focus on the recent period of globalisation: 1986-2005 (see Figure 1). This is, of course, the period during which there was a dramatic surge in international financial flows across industrial countries as well as between industrial and developing countries.

Figure 1. Growth accounting for more and less financially open economies, de facto integration

Notes: Pre-globalisation is 1966-1986; globalisation is 1986-2005. De facto financial integration is measured by the ratio of the stock of external liabilities to GDP. Growth rates and contributions are calculated by country; the numbers shown above are the medians for each group of countries.

While physical and human capital accumulation were the largest contributors to GDP growth in the earlier period, among more financially open economies the contribution of TFP growth increased dramatically during the globalisation period. By contrast, in less financially open economies, the contribution of TFP growth fell slightly during the globalisation period, and output growth was mostly attributed to the accumulation of both types of capital. It is also interesting to note that average output growth is rather similar between the two groups of economies during the globalisation period, confirming other evidence that there is no clear correlation between the level of financial openness and GDP growth, notwithstanding the sharp differences in the contribution shares of TFP growth.

A more sophisticated approach

The stylised facts above provide an intriguing hint of a positive relationship between financial openness and TFP growth, although they are based just on averages across time and countries. In the next phase of our analysis, we conduct a detailed econometric investigation of the relationship between financial openness and TFP growth using cross-section and dynamic panel regressions.

Our baseline results suggest that financial openness – as measured by de jure openness of the capital account (fewer capital controls) – has a causal effect on TFP growth. This result holds up even after we control for other determinants of overall growth and account for the possibility of reverse causation – that countries with higher productivity growth get more financial flows.

Surprisingly, overall de facto financial integration does not seem to matter for TFP growth. This is an odd result, especially since a number of other studies have concluded that de facto integration may be more relevant than de jure openness for detecting the output growth benefits of financial openness. However, this conclusion turns out to mask a novel and interesting result. When we disaggregate the financial integration measure into stocks of liabilities attributable to different types of underlying capital flows, we find strong evidence that foreign direct investment (FDI) and portfolio equity boost TFP growth while debt is negatively correlated with TFP growth.

This result seems intuitively plausible as FDI and portfolio equity flows are far more likely than debt to generate the indirect benefits and improvements in allocative efficiency mentioned earlier. Accumulation of external debt has also been shown to raise the risks of financial crises and other adverse outcomes. Interestingly, the negative relationship between stocks of external debt liabilities and TFP growth is partially attenuated in economies with better-developed financial markets and better institutional quality.

Why does openess spur TFP but not GDP growth?

How can we square our result that financial openness has a significant positive effect on TFP growth with the existing literature suggesting that the effect of financial openness on output growth is hard to detect? There are several possible reasons for this finding. First, the timing of the adjustment of TFP and output to greater financial integration may be different. TFP growth is often associated with the introduction of new technologies. This could potentially slow down the growth rate of output in the short run, offsetting the growth-enhancing effects of TFP. There could also be some adjustment costs that delay the realisation of the positive effects of TFP on output growth in developing countries.

Second, financial openness might influence the reallocation of outputs and inputs across individual producers. This reallocation from less productive to more productive plants would ultimately increase total factor productivity with no significant gains in employment or overall output. Sharp exchange rate appreciations resulting from surges in capital inflows could also result in such reallocation, where only efficient producers who are able to raise productivity and remain competitive are left standing.

More research is needed…

Our analysis using macroeconomic data bolsters recent microeconomic evidence (based on firm- and industry-level data) that financial integration, especially if it takes the form of FDI or portfolio equity flows, leads to significant gains in efficiency and TFP growth. Moreover, in tandem with the recent literature showing that TFP growth rather than factor accumulation is the key driver of long-term growth, our results suggest that capital account liberalisation does have some real benefits. More research is clearly needed to better understand the specific channels through which financial openness boosts productivity growth – these could include technological spillovers, higher efficiency due to increased competition, and better corporate governance.

References

Hall, Robert E., Jones, Charles I., 1999, “Why Do Some Countries Produce So Much More Output Per Worker Than Others?Quarterly Journal of Economics 114 (1), 83-116.

Kose, M. Ayhan, Eswar S. Prasad, and Marco E. Terrones, 2008, “Does Openness to International Financial Flows Raise Productivity Growth?” Forthcoming in Journal of International Money and Finance.

Obstfeld, Maurice, 2008, "International Finance and Growth in Developing Countries: What Have We Learned?" Forthcoming in IMF Staff Papers.

 

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