Capital Markets Integration, Volatility and Persistence
    Working Paper 5241
  
        
    DOI 10.3386/w5241
  
        
    Issue Date 
  
          This paper shows that volatility induces adverse first order welfare effects in countries excluded from the global capital market. This result is illustrated in a model characterized by gains from a greater division of activities, where shocks are persistent. We show that non-linearities attributed to financial autarky explain the adverse welfare effects of volatility. We identify the parameters determining the magnitude of the loss -- it is proportional to the autocorrelation of shocks, to volatility (as measured by the standard deviation of shocks), and to the degree of product differentiation (as measured by the substitutability among intermediate products).
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      Copy CitationJoshua Aizenman, "Capital Markets Integration, Volatility and Persistence," NBER Working Paper 5241 (1995), https://doi.org/10.3386/w5241.
Published Versions
Journal of Macroeconomics, Vol. 19 (1997):  217-236. citation courtesy of 
 
     
    