estimation and simulation of a financialized growth regime with a stock flow consistent model

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Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model L. REYES, J. MAZIER, M. CLÉVENOT, Y. GUY

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Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model L. REYES, J. MAZIER, M. CLÉVENOT, Y. GUY. Stylised Facts. The Model. Econometric Results. Simulations. Some stylised facts. The next structural crisis ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow

Consistent Model

L. REYES, J. MAZIER, M. CLÉVENOT, Y. GUY

Page 2: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Stylised Facts.

The Model.

Econometric Results.

Simulations.

Page 3: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Some stylised facts

Page 4: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

The next structural crisis ?

Page 5: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

An important increase of real interests rate at the beginning of the eigthies

Page 6: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

The marginal role played by equities in the financing of physical investment (5% avg. in the long-run)

Page 7: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

A «stabilisation» of the global financial burden with a transformation in the channels

Page 8: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Relevant symmetry between liabilities and assets ratios due to valuation effects

Page 9: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model
Page 10: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Financial Profitability

Page 11: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

The Model

Page 12: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

The Model (1)

Page 13: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

The Model (2)

Page 14: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

The Model (3)

Page 15: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Econometric Results

Page 16: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Econometric Results (1)

All series come from INSEE and Banque de France.

Period under study: 1980(1) – 2009(4)

Vector Autorregressions, rigorously tested.

Medium- to long-term relationships.

Annual capital (as stock and as flow) was brought to quarters using the Denton (1971) technique.

Page 17: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Econometric Results (2)

Accumulation depends positively on the rate of profit (EBE/pkK-1) and capacity utilization (u).

Accumulation is negatively influenced by the debt ratio (L/pkK) and the real long-term interest rate (r).

The rate of return on equities held is calculated as in Godley and Lavoie, 2001: ree = (Ee-1Δpe+RD)/(peEe)-1

ree has rendered capital more, rather than less, expensive.

Page 18: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Econometric Results (3)

Financial accumulation is positively determined by the profit rate, financial profitability and the debt ratio.

If the cost of debt (r) diminishes, this in turn encourages indebtedness by discouraging financial accumulation (r is here fully exogenous).

Difficult to estimate. Still, rigorously tested and consistent.

Page 19: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Econometric Results (4)

The debt ratio depends positively on the profit rate (a source of cyclical fluctuations in our model, since the profit rate also encourages fixed capital accumulation, and this in turn depends negatively on debt).

Financial profitability encourages higher debt levels.

The cost of debt has an obvious negative effect on this ratio.

Page 20: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Econometric Results (5)

An “own funds” norm is the ratio of issued equities to total accumulation: peE / (pkK + peEe)

A higher cost of debt (r) decreases external funding (debt) as it increases internal funding (own funds).

Higher debt increases own funds (a source of instability).

Higher financial profitability diminishes own funds.

Page 21: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations

Page 22: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations (1)Two alternative closures:

Model 1: with an indebtedness norm. Model 2: with an own funds norm.

Shocks on the demand side: Consumption Wage share Accumulation rate

Shocks on the financial side: Rate of financial accumulation Household’s demand for equities

Page 23: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations (2)

Model 1. Indebtedness norm: Exhibits financial cycles as a normal mode of

regulation. Equities issued as a residual. The price of equities clearing the market.

Model 2. Own funds norm: Financial bubble with increasing financial

accumulation and rising equities’ prices Debt ratio increasing. No stabilizing mechanism.

Page 24: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations (3)

With an indebtedness norm, we “shock” the consumption function.

Page 25: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations (4)

Now, we shock the same function with an own funds norm.

Page 26: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations (5)

Accumulation rate under an indebtedness norm.

Page 27: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

Simulations (6)

Shock on fixed capital accumulation under an own funds norm.

Page 28: Estimation and Simulation of a Financialized Growth Regime with a Stock Flow Consistent Model

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