Determinants of U.S. Business Investment
Emanuel Kopp
No 2018/139, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
U.S. business investment has taken a serious toll during the global financial crisis and also in the recovery phase investment did not pick up as expected. What is surprising is that the alleged investment slowdown happened at a time of record corporate profits and retained earnings, highly supportive financial conditions, improved sentiment, rising equity valuations, and strong labor markets—factors established in supporting business investment. Applying accelerator models and Bayesian Model Averaging, this paper discusses the extent to which U.S. business investment has been unusual. Results suggest that cautious expectations of future aggregate demand growth explain most of the weakness in investment, and that the oil and gas sector accounts for a considerable portion of the investment slump. Consequently, the behavior of U.S. business investment in recent years has not been unusual once these factors are taken into account. Also, there is very little evidence for uncertainty holding back investment, or that firms’ financial measures "crowded out" capital expenditure.
Keywords: WP; business investment; firm; investment growth; private fixed investment; accelerator models; Bayesian Model Averaging; investment gap; growth outcome; accelerator model; investment activity; equipment investment; consumption deflator; Private investment; Oil prices; Stocks; Bank credit; Global financial crisis of 2008-2009; Global (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 31
Date: 2018-06-15
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)
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