Financial Frictions on Capital Allocation: A Transmission Mechanism of TFP Fluctuations
- 14 April 2009
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper provides a theory of financial frictions as a transmission mechanism for primitive shocks to translate into aggregate TFP fluctuations. In our model, financial frictions distort existing capital allocation across different production units, rather than investment in new capital. News shocks on future technology improvement are introduced as a device to identify TFP fluctuations originating from this mechanism. Our simulation shows that variations in financial frictions in response to news shocks can generate sizable fluctuations in aggregate TFP and, thus, business cycles before the actual technology change is realized. Using a combined dataset from Compustat and IBES, we find that the empirical responses of capital acquisition to prospects about future profitability are significantly larger for firms more likely to be financially constrained, while such a pattern does not exist for new capital investment. Furthermore, capital acquisition of constrained firms is found to be more procyclical than that for unconstrained ones. Our evidence thus provides strong support for the importance of financial frictions on capital allocation as the transmission mechanism proposed by our theory.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- When can changes in expectations cause business cycle fluctuations in neo-classical settings?Journal of Economic Theory, 2007
- Stock Prices, News, and Economic FluctuationsAmerican Economic Review, 2006
- Heterogeneous Firms, Productivity, and Poverty TrapsPublished by Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis ,2005
- An exploration into Pigou's theory of cyclesJournal of Monetary Economics, 2004
- When Does the Market Matter? Stock Prices and the Investment of Equity-Dependent FirmsPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2002
- The Transition to a New Economy After the Second Industrial RevolutionPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2001
- Why Is Productivity Procyclical? Why Do We Care?Published by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2000
- Understanding Productivity: Lessons from Longitudinal MicrodataJournal of Economic Literature, 2000
- Productivity Dynamics: U.S. Manufacturing Plants, 1972–1986Journal of Productivity Analysis, 1998
- Returns to Scale in U.S. Production: Estimates and ImplicationsJournal of Political Economy, 1997