Abstract: Recent research has explored the growing
‘financialization’ process in the
U.S. and other advanced economies.
The term is a catch-all phrase used to denote important changes in the
structure of non-financial corporations’ balance sheets, including the growth
of income from financial subsidiaries and investment as well as growth in the
transfer of earnings to financial markets in the forms of interest payments,
dividend payments and stock buybacks. This paper seeks to empirically explore
the relationship between financialization in the U.S economy and real
investment at the firm level. Using data from a sample of non-financial
corporations from 1973 to 2003, I find a negative relationship between real investment
and financialization. First, increased financial investment and increased
financial profit opportunities may have crowded out real investment by changing
the incentives of firm managers and directing funds away from real investment.
Second, increased payments to the financial markets may have impeded real investment
by decreasing available internal funds, shortening the planning horizons of the
firm management, and increasing uncertainty. These two channels can help explain
the negative relationship I find between investment and financialization.