ECON 2000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 91: Cash Flow, Investment Goods, Capital Accumulation

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ECON 2000
Lecture 91
Financing constraints
- When a firm wants to invest in new capital, it often raises the
necessary funds in financial markets
- Financing may take several forms: obtaining loans from banks, selling
bonds to public, or selling shares in future profits on stock market
- Neoclassical model assumes that if a firm is willing to pay the cost of
capital, the financial markets will make the funds available
- Sometimes firms face financing constraints limits on the amt they
can raise in financial markets
- Financing constraints can prevent firms from undertaking profitable
investments
- When firm is unable to raise funds in financial markets, the amt it can
spend on new capital goods is limited to the amt it is currently earning
- Financing constraints influence investment behaviour of firms just as
borrowing constraints influence the consumption behaviour of
households
- Borrowing constraints cause households to determine their
consumption on the basis of current rather than permanent income
- Financing constraints cause firms to determine their investment on
the basis of their current cash flow rather than expected profitability
- Recession reduces employment, rental price of capital and profits
- If firms expect recession to be short lived, they will have only a small
effect on Tobin’s q
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Document Summary

When a firm wants to invest in new capital, it often raises the necessary funds in financial markets. Financing may take several forms: obtaining loans from banks, selling bonds to public, or selling shares in future profits on stock market. Neoclassical model assumes that if a firm is willing to pay the cost of capital, the financial markets will make the funds available. Sometimes firms face financing constraints limits on the amt they can raise in financial markets. Financing constraints can prevent firms from undertaking profitable investments. When firm is unable to raise funds in financial markets, the amt it can spend on new capital goods is limited to the amt it is currently earning. Financing constraints influence investment behaviour of firms just as borrowing constraints influence the consumption behaviour of households. Borrowing constraints cause households to determine their consumption on the basis of current rather than permanent income.

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