Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5084755 International Review of Financial Analysis 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We report how corporate investment in China has responded to the financial crisis.•Demand effects dominate financial constraints; and uncertainty.•Financial assets held by a nonfinancial firm influences fixed investment.•State owned firms are less affected by the financial crisis.•Foreign ownership acts as a buffer against the financial crisis.

China's growth model suggests that the 2008 financial crisis may have affected the Chinese economy differently from what one observes in mature market economies. In this paper, we examine how Chinese corporate investment responded to the financial crisis by using 1689 listed nonfinancial firms during Q12006-Q32010. We document that (1) the overall impact of the financial crisis on Chinese corporate investment is negative; (2) among three channels conveying the effect of the financial crisis, namely, the demand channel, the financial constraints channel, and the uncertainty channel, the demand channel dominates; (3) financial assets held by a nonfinancial firm are important in explaining the firm's fixed investment behaviour; (4) as compared to non-state firms, state-controlled firms are less affected by the financial crisis and more active in engaging in financial assets investment; and (5) foreign ownership can be seen as a buffer against the negative effect of the financial crisis and foreign-involved Chinese firms are less active in financial assets investment as compared to domestic firms.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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