International Portfolios, Capital Accumulation and Foreign Assets Dynamics
- 28 June 2008
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
Despite the liberalization of capital flows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We depart from the two familiar explanations of equity home bias: transaction costs that impede international diversification, and terms of trade responses to supply shocks that provide risk sharing, so that there is little incentive to hold diversified portfolios. We show that the interaction of the following ingredients generates a realistic equity home bias: capital accumulation, shocks to the efficiency of physical investment, as well as international trade in stocks and bonds. In our model, domestic stocks are used to hedge fluctuations in local wage income. Terms of trade risk is hedged using bonds denominated in local goods and in foreign goods. In contrast to related models, the low level of international diversification does not depend on strongly countercyclical terms of trade. The model also reproduces the cyclical dynamics of foreign asset positions and of international capital flows.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do trade costs in goods market lead to home bias in equities?Journal of International Economics, 2009
- When Bonds Matter: Home Bias in Goods and AssetsPublished by Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco ,2008
- International Portfolios with Supply, Demand and Redistributive ShocksPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2007
- The World Income DistributionThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2002
- Wages, profits and the international portfolio puzzleEuropean Economic Review, 1996
- The International Diversification Puzzle is Worse Than You ThinkPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1995
- Consumption and real exchange rates in dynamic economies with non-traded goodsJournal of International Economics, 1993
- Dynamics of the Trade Balance and the Terms of Trade: The S-CurvePublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1992
- The International Transmission of Real Business CyclesInternational Economic Review, 1988
- International Portfolio Choice and Corporation Finance: A SynthesisThe Journal of Finance, 1983