'Capital flight', in
economics, occurs when
assets and/or
money rapidly flow out of a
country, due to an economic event that disturbs
investors and causes them to lower their valuation of the assets in that country, or otherwise to lose confidence in its economic strength. This leads to a disappearance of
wealth and is usually accompanied by a sharp drop in the
exchange rate of the affected country (
devaluation).
This fall is particularly damaging when the capital belongs to the people of the affected country, because not only are the citizens now burdened by the loss of faith in the economy and devaluation of their currency, but probably also their assets have lost much of their
nominal value. This leads to dramatic decreases in the
purchasing power of the country's assets and makes it increasingly expensive to
import goods.
In
1995, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimated that capital flight amounted to roughly half of the outstanding foreign debt of the most heavily indebted countries of the world.
Capital flight was seen in some
Asian and
Latin American markets in the
1990s. The
Argentine economic crisis of
2001 was in part the result of massive capital flight, induced by fears that Argentina would
default on its
external debt (the situation was made worse by the fact that Argentina has an artificially low fixed
exchange rate and was dependent on large levels of
reserve currency). This was also seen in
Venezuela in the early 1980s with one year's total export income leaving through illegal capital flight.
Capital flight is also sometimes used to refer to the removal of wealth and assets from a city or region within a country. Post-apartheid South African cities are probably the most visible example of this phenomenon.
Johannesburg in particular has been abandoned by business moving to northern
suburbs. The flight of capital from central cities to the suburbs that ring them was also common throughout the second half of the twentieth century in the
United States.
In the last quarter of 20th century capital flight was observed from countries that offer low or negative
real interest rate (like Russia and Argentina) to countries that offer higher real interest rate (like China).
See also
★
Economic recession
★
Human capital flight (brain drain)
★
Inflation
★ ''
Cartel des gauches''
★
French Popular Front (1936-38)
External links
★
Capital flight after revolution Anarchist view of capital flight
★
"Capital Flight" from the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics