Date: 2009
Type: Working Paper
What drives US foreign borrowing? : evidence on external adjustment to transitory and permanent shocks
Working Paper, London : Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), 2009CEPR Discussion Paper, 2009/7134
CORSETTI, Giancarlo, KONSTANTINOU, Panagiotis T., What drives US foreign borrowing? : evidence on external adjustment to transitory and permanent shocks, London : Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), 2009CEPR Discussion Paper, 2009/7134 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/36469
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
The joint dynamics of US net output, consumption, and (valuation-adjusted) foreign assets and liabilities, characterized empirically following Lettau and Ludvigson [2004], is shown to be strikingly consistent with current account theory. While US consumption is virtually insulated from transitory shocks, these contribute considerably to the variation in net output and, even more so, in gross foreign positions, arguably smoothing temporary variations in returns. A single permanent shock – naturally interpreted as a productivity shock – raises consumption swiftly while causing net output to adjust only gradually. This leads to persistent, procyclical external deficits but, interestingly, moves gross assets and liabilities in the same direction.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/36469
Series/Number: CEPR Discussion Paper; 2009/7134
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