Investment and Financing Constraints: Evidence from the Funding of Corporate Pension Plans
56 Pages Posted: 30 Dec 2004
Abstract
I exploit sharply nonlinear funding rules for defined benefit pension plans in order to identify the dependence of corporate investment on internal financial resources in a large sample. Capital expenditures decline with mandatory contributions to defined benefit pension plans, even when controlling for correlations between the pension funding status itself and the firm's unobserved investment opportunities. The effect is particularly evident among firms that face financing constraints based on observable variables such as credit ratings. Investment also displays strong negative correlations with the part of mandatory contributions resulting solely from unexpected asset market movements.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Taxation and Corporate Pension Policy
By Irwin Tepper
-
Earnings Manipulation, Pension Assumptions and Managerial Investment Decisions
By Daniel Bergstresser, Joshua D. Rauh, ...
-
Earnings Manipulation, Pension Assumptions and Managerial Investment Decisions
By Daniel Bergstresser, Joshua D. Rauh, ...
-
Earnings Manipulation and Managerial Investment Decisions: Evidence from Sponsored Pension Plans
By Daniel Bergstresser, Joshua D. Rauh, ...
-
Funding and Asset Allocation in Corporate Pension Plans: an Empirical Investigation
By Zvi Bodie, Randall Morck, ...
-
Did Pension Plan Accounting Contribute to a Stock Market Bubble?
-
Pension Funding Decisions, Interest Rate Assumptions and Share Prices
By Martin S. Feldstein and Randall Morck