Resumen En América Latina la complejización de las relaciones financieras y la consolidación de la gran empresa tuvo lugar durante el periodo de globalización, con la peculiaridad de que el mercado de capitales no se desarrolló a la par, ya que las operaciones de las grandes empresas (multinacionales y multilatinas) no se realizaron a través de las instituciones financieras domésticas, sino vía la emisión de bonos en los centros financieros internacionales. A partir de esta idea es que se realiza un modelo econométrico de datos de panel que mide el impacto de los flujos de capital (IED y cartera) en un conjunto de indicadores del sector financiero y real para mostrar que la entrada de capital no contribuyó al desarrollo financiero ni al crecimiento económico.
Abstract In Latin America, financial relations became more complicated and large companies were consolidated during the globalization phase. Interestingly, however, the capital market did not develop at the same pace, as the operations of large companies (multinationals and multilatinas) were not conducted via domestic financial institutions, but rather via bonds issued by international financial centers. In light of this, the article employs a panel data econometric model to measure the impact of capital flows (FDI and portfolio) on a set of financial and real sector indicators. Findings show that capital inflows did not contribute to financial development or economic growth.
See how this article has been cited at scite.ai
scite shows how a scientific paper has been cited by providing the context of the citation, a classification describing whether it supports, mentions, or contrasts the cited claim, and a label indicating in which section the citation was made.