Do Investment-Cash Flow Sensitivities Provide Useful Measures of Financing Constraints? is a research paper published in The Quarterly Journal of Economics (1997). On theSindex it has a DataRank of 1.3. It has been cited 6,622 times.
No. This paper investigates the relationship between financing constraints and investment-cash flow sensitivities by analyzing the firms identified by Fazzari, Hubbard, and Petersen as having unusually high investment-cash flow sensitivities. We find that firms that appear less financially constrained exhibit significantly greater sensitivities than firms that appear more financially constrained. We find this pattern for the entire sample period, subperiods, and individual years. These results (and simple theoretical arguments) suggest that higher sensitivities cannot be interpreted as evidence that firms are more financially constrained. These findings call into question the interpretation of most previous research that uses this methodology.
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1.3
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