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Imbalanced Catch-up to Rational Expectations: Capital Flows during Convergence
Type
working paper
Author(s)
Abstract
How long shall a country take to learn the world technological frontier? What would happen if that country found the same difficulties in learning the true model of its economy? After all, countries catching up often experience life-changing transformations during the catch-up to a balanced growth path. We show that an open economy, learning rational expectations alongside foreign technology, may be characterized by excessive saving and current account surpluses, as often observed in the data and at odds with the standard open economy theoretical predictions, and not fully explained by standard adaptations such as habit formation. Moreover, such a learning process in a large developing country can upset the savings behavior of a fully rational expectations advanced country. In a US-China calibration, we show that this effect can be so strong as to explain important current account imbalances, the savings glut hypothesis, as well as the distribution of factor income.
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
SEPS - Economic Policy
Subject(s)
Eprints ID
250658
File(s)
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open access
Name
MPRA_paper_71009[1].pdf
Size
704.94 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
6ebd46246bc9e9975a923a255f7d82fb
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open access
Name
MPRA_paper_71009.pdf
Size
704.94 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
6ebd46246bc9e9975a923a255f7d82fb