Abstract
In this paper we re-evaluate the capital immobility
hypothesis of Feldstein and Horioka (1980) for the case of the European Union
and the Eurozone, based on long-run regressions. We employ the Long Run
Derivative proposed by Fischer and Seater (1993) in order to examine capital
mobility as a long-run phenomenon. In order to enhance the robustness of our
results we also perform panel causality tests on our data as it is a common
approach in this setting. Our empirical findings provide no evidence in favor
of the capital immobility hypothesis. In fact, we reject capital immobility
even before the creation of the European Union, the introduction of the
Eurozone or the 2008 global financial crisis.