Capital mobility in Russia

This paper investigates the level of capital mobility in Russia, testing the Feldstein–Horioka (1980) puzzle (FHP). The study examines relations between saving and investment flows in Russia in the presence of structural breaks. It employs the quarterly data for the period 1995–2013, in which all es...

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Main Author: Natalya Ketenci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Voprosy Ekonomiki 2015-12-01
Series:Russian Journal of Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405473916000040
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spelling doaj-8d52bef48cae4ceb9cdfc6ec7fa18f242020-11-25T01:49:39ZengVoprosy EkonomikiRussian Journal of Economics2405-47392015-12-011438640310.1016/j.ruje.2016.02.003Capital mobility in RussiaNatalya KetenciThis paper investigates the level of capital mobility in Russia, testing the Feldstein–Horioka (1980) puzzle (FHP). The study examines relations between saving and investment flows in Russia in the presence of structural breaks. It employs the quarterly data for the period 1995–2013, in which all estimations are made for two periods: the full period 1995–2013 and 2000–2013, the post-Russian crisis period. The empirical analysis includes the Kejriwal and Perron (2008, 2010) structural break test to determine the presence of structural breaks in series and estimate the savings retention coefficient under the consideration of structural shifts. To facilitate comparison, the parameters of the model were estimated employing the OLS and FMOLS procedures. To test the cointegration relationships between investment and saving flows in Russia, two different cointegration tests were applied to the data. The first applied was the Maki (2012) cointegration test, which allows for an unknown number of breaks; then, in a case where only one break was detected, the Carrion-i-Silvestre and Sanso (2006) cointegration test was employed. The results of this study provide evidence of high capital mobility and reject the existence of the FHP in the post-Russian crisis period. Evidence of the cointegration presence indicates the solvency of a current account in Russia.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405473916000040Feldstein–Horioka puzzlesaving–investment associationcapital mobilitycointegrationstructural breaksRussia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natalya Ketenci
spellingShingle Natalya Ketenci
Capital mobility in Russia
Russian Journal of Economics
Feldstein–Horioka puzzle
saving–investment association
capital mobility
cointegration
structural breaks
Russia
author_facet Natalya Ketenci
author_sort Natalya Ketenci
title Capital mobility in Russia
title_short Capital mobility in Russia
title_full Capital mobility in Russia
title_fullStr Capital mobility in Russia
title_full_unstemmed Capital mobility in Russia
title_sort capital mobility in russia
publisher Voprosy Ekonomiki
series Russian Journal of Economics
issn 2405-4739
publishDate 2015-12-01
description This paper investigates the level of capital mobility in Russia, testing the Feldstein–Horioka (1980) puzzle (FHP). The study examines relations between saving and investment flows in Russia in the presence of structural breaks. It employs the quarterly data for the period 1995–2013, in which all estimations are made for two periods: the full period 1995–2013 and 2000–2013, the post-Russian crisis period. The empirical analysis includes the Kejriwal and Perron (2008, 2010) structural break test to determine the presence of structural breaks in series and estimate the savings retention coefficient under the consideration of structural shifts. To facilitate comparison, the parameters of the model were estimated employing the OLS and FMOLS procedures. To test the cointegration relationships between investment and saving flows in Russia, two different cointegration tests were applied to the data. The first applied was the Maki (2012) cointegration test, which allows for an unknown number of breaks; then, in a case where only one break was detected, the Carrion-i-Silvestre and Sanso (2006) cointegration test was employed. The results of this study provide evidence of high capital mobility and reject the existence of the FHP in the post-Russian crisis period. Evidence of the cointegration presence indicates the solvency of a current account in Russia.
topic Feldstein–Horioka puzzle
saving–investment association
capital mobility
cointegration
structural breaks
Russia
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405473916000040
work_keys_str_mv AT natalyaketenci capitalmobilityinrussia
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