Investissement financier, investissement physique et désendettement des firmes : y a-t-il un arbitrage ? Une étude sur données de panel du comportement des entreprises industrielles de 1979 à 1986

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1991

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Copyright PERSEE 2003-2023. Works reproduced on the PERSEE website are protected by the general rules of the Code of Intellectual Property. For strictly private, scientific or teaching purposes excluding all commercial use, reproduction and communication to the public of this document is permitted on condition that its origin and copyright are clearly mentionned.



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Daniel Szpiro et al., « Investissement financier, investissement physique et désendettement des firmes : y a-t-il un arbitrage ? Une étude sur données de panel du comportement des entreprises industrielles de 1979 à 1986 », Revue économique, ID : 10.3406/reco.1991.409301


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Physical investment, financial investment and debt : is there a trade off ? An analysis based on a panel of industrial firms, 1983-1986 In order to assess if physical investment is crowded out by financial investment, a portfolio model is estimated on a panel of French firms. On the whole, returns on assets cannot explain much. But in the short run, an increase in wealth is primarily used to get rid of debt, and in a lesser respect to buy financial assets. The estimation of the model, firm by firm, shows that only half of the population seems to act according to a portfolio choice. Amongst these firms, only a small proportion substitute financial to physical assets. A simple investment function also concludes that there is no crowding out.

Physical investment, financial investment and debt : is there a trade off ? An analysis based on a panel of industrial firms, 1983-1986 In order to assess if physical investment is crowded out by financial investment, a portfolio model is estimated on a panel of French firms. On the whole, returns on assets cannot explain much. But in the short run, an increase in wealth is primarily used to get rid of debt, and in a lesser respect to buy financial assets. The estimation of the model, firm by firm, shows that only half of the population seems to act according to a portfolio choice. Amongst these firms, only a small proportion substitute financial to physical assets. A simple investment function also concludes that there is no crowding out.

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