INVESTMENT DURING THE KOREAN FINANCIAL CRISIS: A STRUCTURAL ECONOMETRIC APPROACH
Simon Gilchrist and
Jae Sim
No WP2007-001, Boston University - Department of Economics - Working Papers Series from Boston University - Department of Economics
Abstract:
Without capital market imperfections, the capital structure of a firm, including the size, the maturity and the currency composition of debts, should not matter for investment decisions. The Asian financial crises provide a good opportunity to test this hypothesis. We approach the problem in two ways: First, we apply a conventional reduced-form analysis to a panel data of Korean manufacturing firms, arguing that the devaluation that occurred during the crisis provides a natural experiment in which to assess the effect of balance sheet shocks to investment. Second, we use indirect inference to estimate a structural dynamic programming problem of a firm with foreign debts and financial constraints. Both reduced-form evidence and structural parameter estimates imply an important role for finance in investment at the firm level. Counterfactual simulations imply that balance sheet effects may account for 50% to 80% of the drop in investment during the crisis period. Although our estimates suggest that foreign denominated debt had relatively little effect on aggregate investment spending for the Korean economy during this crisis episode, counterfactual experiments imply sizeable contractions in investment through this mechanism for economies that are more heavily dependent on foreign-denominated debt.
Pages: 56 pages
Date: 2007-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge, nep-ifn, nep-mac and nep-sea
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Working Paper: Investment during the Korean financial crisis: A structural econometric approach (2007)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bos:wpaper:wp2007-001
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