1995 | OriginalPaper | Chapter
Structural Changes in Japanese Long-term Capital Flows
Author : Shinji Takagi
Published in: The Structure of the Japanese Economy
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Included in: Professional Book Archive
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This chapter will review the recent structural changes in Japan’s longterm capital flows, and analyze the statistical relationship between current and long-term capital transactions. It will show that long-term capital outflows from Japan expanded rapidly after 1981, mainly as a result of the progressive liberalization of regulations on the acquisition of foreign securities by resident institutional investors. With increased international portfolio diversification, it is believed that the portfolio motive for acquiring foreign securities has abated, and we can no longer expect net long-term capital outflows in the future to correspond with the size of the expected current account surplus. This prediction receives support from the results of causality tests, which suggest that current transactions and long-term capital transactions (securities transactions, in particular) had no causal relationship in the 1980s.