Alternative Perspectives on the Rise of Corporate Debt Dependency: The U.S. Postwar Experience
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Review of Radical Political Economics
- Vol. 18 (1-2) , 205-235
- https://doi.org/10.1177/048661348601800110
Abstract
One aspect of the contemporary crisis of the United States economy has been a sharp increase since the mid-1960s in the reliance on debt finance by corporations, households, and the federal government. This paper focuses on the borrowing behavior of nonfinancial corporations. It first presents measures of borrowing on the basis of data and accounting methods derived from the Federal Reserve Board's Flow of Funds Accounts. Three alternative approaches are then developed for explaining the corporations increasing reliance on debt: neoclassical cost-of-capital theory; the financial fragility framework of Hyman Minsky; and a Marxian falling-rate-of-profit perspective. For each approach, statistical evidence, including two-variable regression analysis, is presented to evaluate their relative explanatory power. The results of the investigation support the Marxian approach over the other two. In the conclusion, the relationship between these findings and the related contemporaneous phenomena of financial instability and inflation are briefly explored.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Deepening Crisis of U.S. CapitalismMonthly Review, 1981
- Postwar Changes in the American Financial MarketsPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1980
- Inflation, Rational Valuation and the MarketCFA Magazine, 1979
- FINANCIAL ANALYSIS IN AN INFLATIONARY ENVIRONMENTThe Journal of Finance, 1977
- The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great DepressionsEconometrica, 1933