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Do Stock Market Liberalizations Cause Investment Booms?

Work, Entrepreneurship, and Finance

Stock market liberalizations lead private investment booms. In a sample of 11 developing countries that liberalized, one year later 9 of 11 experience growth rates of private investment above their non-liberalization median. In the second year after liberalization this number is 10 of 11. The mean growth rate of private investment in the two years immediately following stock market liberalization exceeds the sample mean by 23 percentage points. The relationship between private investment and stock market liberalization persists after controlling for world business cycle effects, contemporaneous economic reforms, and domestic fundamentals. Because the possibility of reverse causality cannot be ruled out, we cannot conclude that stock market liberalizations cause investment booms. Nevertheless, the evidence stands in sharp contrast with recent work that suggests capital account liberalization has no effect on investment.

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Author(s)
Peter Blair Henry
Publication Date
April, 2000