Abstract
Corporates have traditionally been modelled for their investment rather than saving behaviour. However, in recent times the firm-level saving has displayed an unprecedented behaviour across developed and developing economies. Corporate saving behaviour in India has also witnessed fluctuations, and this study captures a mix of aggregate and firm-level variables that may explain this behaviour. This article has three objectives (a) to understand the firm and macroeconomic factors that drive firm-level saving; (b) to examine whether the firm saving is affected by savings in preceding years; (c) to identify whether this saving behaviour of firms is for precautionary motives or not. The data set used in this article includes panel data of 2,109 publicly listed, manufacturing and service sector firms for the financial years 2004–2018. The data analysis has been done using dynamic panel-data models employing system GMM estimation with multiple robustness checks. The study findings show that firm-level saving in India is mainly driven by lagged corporate saving, Tobin’s Q, GDP growth rate, CPI inflation, and financial depth, among other factors. Additionally, empirical evidence supports the presence of dynamic persistence effect and precautionary motives for savings by firms. JEL Codes: E21, G01, G32, C33
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