ROMANIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC FORECASTING, cilt.25, sa.1, ss.45-67, 2022 (SSCI)
This paper reexamines the magnitude of international capital mobility under the Feldstein-Horioka puzzle in the context of 29 high-income countries over the 1980-2019 period. The
puzzle is also revisited by employing the Dynamic Common-Correlated Effects method to
incorporate the issues of cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity. Moreover, the
study investigates the role of macroeconomic and social factors, such as labor share of
income, welfare-relevant technological progress, financial development, government
expenditure, and political globalization, to go further beyond the traditional findings in the
existing literature. The empirical results are based on three main headings. First, the findings
confirm the existence of the Feldstein-Horioka puzzle. In other words, there is a lack of
international capital mobility among high-income countries. Second, by using the interaction
terms for financial development, government expenditure, and political globalization with the
savings ratio, the immobile characteristics of international capital can be reduced by further
implications of a higher rate of government expenditure. Finally, the results show that having
more unequal distribution of income among capital and labor intensifies the domestic
investment-saving nexus for an aggregate economy since the financial assets become more
shrinking away from flowing out of the host country.