|
Public
Policy Discussion Paper No. 04-6
by Borja Larrain
More financially developed countries show lower volatility
of industrial output. Volatility is particularly reduced in
industries that are more financially dependent. Most of the
reduction is in idiosyncratic volatility. Systematic volatility
is reduced less strongly, implying that industries are more
closely correlated with GDP in more financially developed
countries. At the firm level, short-term debt is negatively
correlated with output as financial development increases,
suggesting that debt is used in a countercyclical way to stabilize
production. The results indicate that financial development
relaxes financial constraints mainly to smooth negative cashflow
shocks.
JEL classification codes: E32, G0, G31, O16
Keywords: financial development, financial constraints, volatility
Full-text paper  |