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Rajan Zingales (1998) - Financial Dependence And Growth (view source)
Revision as of 19:07, 26 June 2011
, 19:07, 26 June 2011New page: *This page is referenced in The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page ==Reference(s)== *Rajan, R., and ...
*This page is referenced in [[Entrepreneurship_Research_Boot_Camp#Development_and_Entrepreneurship | The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page]]
==Reference(s)==
*Rajan, R., and Zingales, L. (1998), "Financial dependence and growth", American Economic Review, 88: 559-586. [http://www.edegan.com/pdfs/Rajan%20Zingales%20(1998)%20-%20Financial%20Dependence%20And%20Growth.pdf pdf]
==Abstract==
This paper examines whether financial development facilitates economic growth by scrutinizing one rationale for such a relationship: that financial development reduces the costs of external finance to firms. Specifically, we ask whether in dustrial sectors that are relatively more in need of external finance develop disproportionately faster in countries with more-developed financial markets. We find this to be true in a large sample of countries over the 1980's. We show this result is unlikely to be driven by omitted variables, outliers, or reverse causality.
==Reference(s)==
*Rajan, R., and Zingales, L. (1998), "Financial dependence and growth", American Economic Review, 88: 559-586. [http://www.edegan.com/pdfs/Rajan%20Zingales%20(1998)%20-%20Financial%20Dependence%20And%20Growth.pdf pdf]
==Abstract==
This paper examines whether financial development facilitates economic growth by scrutinizing one rationale for such a relationship: that financial development reduces the costs of external finance to firms. Specifically, we ask whether in dustrial sectors that are relatively more in need of external finance develop disproportionately faster in countries with more-developed financial markets. We find this to be true in a large sample of countries over the 1980's. We show this result is unlikely to be driven by omitted variables, outliers, or reverse causality.