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Summary Topics in Development Studies

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Comprehensive summary of the Topics in Development Studies course.

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1 FOREIGN CAPITAL TO THE RESCUE –
DANNY CASSIMON
When domestic capital is too limited to finance all investments needed for
development, would turning to foreign capital providers (always) be a good idea?
Or would these foreigners (only) make the economy more vulnerable to
instability and crisis, and/or unfairly extract wealth out of the country?

1.1 Defining and measuring capital account openness
Capital account = balance of payments of a country, it shows the total of cross-
border financial transactions that a country is doing with the rest of the world
Capital account openness = you are open to capital flows, not evident
Concepts: 2 perspectives
- De jure: policy: absence of restrictions (controls, taxes)  a country can
decide ‘we want or we don’t want it
Extreme case against capital flows = North-Korea
- De facto: practice: actual cross-border transactions  consequence of de
jure, what you actually observe from the flows
Measuring:
- De jure indicators: AREAERS report (IMF) and Chinn-Ito measure (KAOPEN)
- De facto indicators: foreign ‘assets’ and ‘liabilities’  look at the balance of
payments
o Liabilities include FDI, portfolio investment, loans (debt) and
deposits, derivatives; assets include all the former plus foreign
exchange reserves
o Based on flows: (financial account of) Balance of Payments
o Based on stocks: EWN database

What is the difference between flows and stocks:
You see flows in the balance of payments, stocks refers to the total
outstanding amount at a particular time.
Relationship between them: flow is the change of the stock over the
year, how much did the stock change in the year that we are looking
at?
o Measures can be ‘gross’ or ‘net’

Foreign flows: what are we really talking about? 3 basic foreign capital flows:
- FDI = foreign d? investment, private firms that invest in a firm of another
country  equity of a firm
Why? For the dividend payments (= the return), but this is not guaranteed,
depends on how well your firm is doing
Long term investment
- Portfolio investment: 2 types  short term investment

, o Equity: same financial instrument as FDI, what is the difference
then, under FDI the foreign investors has enough shares to get
involved and control the firm, FDI is a long term investment 
portfolio: investor will by a few shares in the firm, not with the
purpose of participating in the daily control, the foreign money that
comes in through portfolio is considered short-term investment, if
you bought it yesterday, you can sell it tomorrow because the
market for it went up
o Loan  bonds! Bonds are publicly traded, the price of that bond is
determined by the secondary market, also short-term financial
flows, the return are interest payments, it is more fixed than
dividends. You always have to pay with a loan, it doesn’t matter
where you used the mony for, and no matter if the things are going
bad/good. With dividends you only have to pay when it goes well.
- Other investment:
o Loans with interest payments as return
o Deposits (banks), mostly because of higher interest rates  risks:
you get this high interest rate, but your money is eaten by the lower
currency of the country, devaluation of the foreign currency, this is a
speculative transaction (= putting yourself in a risky position, where
you can get a lot of money, but you can loose even more)

1.2 Global capital flows
Evaluation of the openness + global flow (from where to where)
- Increased ‘de jure’ openness does not necessarily lead to increased ‘de
facto’ inflows (and the reverse) – see slide 4
- Global stocks rebound after the GlobFinCrisis (GFC) (slide 5-6), flows
increased up to the GFC, lower after (slide 8-9).
- Evolution of global gross capital flows: sum of incoming flows (‘liabilities’)
and outgoing flows (‘assets’); see slide 7–fig.2
- Global flows still largely to and between ‘advanced economies’; emerging
ecomonies gaining, lower income countries still left out:
‘Lucas paradox’ (slide 7, figure 2; slide 10-11) = why is it that so little of
the worldwide available capital end up in development countries
Flows of developing countries (‘EMDEs; now more lower-income part):
- Inflows remain restricted (in world GDP terms) but increase (7; 10-11);
- Outflows used to be a.o.linked to the investment of foreign currency
reserves (mainly to the US); now much larger and diversified
- Short and limited impact of the global financial crisis, relative to impact
- on advanced economies (see slide 7, fig 2)
- Important to look at capital inflows in a broad sense, incl. aid and
remittances (see slide 12-14).

 This is the conclusion, but look at the slides for the illustration

,1.3 Slide 4 – ‘De jure’ versus ‘de facto’ capital openness:




Emerging market = Brazil, China …
They use this for their measure: Foreign assets (= outflows) + Foreign liabilities
(= inflows) / GDP (in percentages of BBP)
The inflow of a loan creates a liability, receiving country has to pay back.
Worldwide (top left): ‘de facto’ goes up more than ‘de jure’
BUT very different evolutions if we split the world in different economies
- Advanced economies moved till almost full openness
- Emerging economies: they didn’t increase openness very much, but de
facto is very high (vb China)  they don’t open the door really, but
investors try to push the door open
- Other developing economies: they opened the door more than emerging
economies, hoping op more transactions, but hardly anything happened

, 1.4 Slide 5 – Evolution of the total stock of global foreign
investment relative to GDP:




It grew a lot between 95 - 06, it peeked in 2007, but there was the global
financial crisis. It kept growing afterwards, but at a lower pace. It was absolute
growth but in relative terms to world GDP is kind of stayed the same.

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