Does Foreign Direct Investment Promote Development?Theodore Moran, Edward M Graham, Magnus Blomström What is the impact of foreign direct investment (FDI) on development? The answer is important for the lives of millions—if not billions—of workers, families, and communities in the developing world. The answer is crucial for policymakers in developing and developed countries, and in multilateral agencies. This volume gathers together the cutting edge of new research on FDI and host country economic performance and presents the most sophisticated critiques of current and past inquiries. It probes the limits of what can be determined from available evidence and from innovative investigative techniques. In addition, the book presents new results, concludes with an analysis of the implications for contemporary policy debates, and proposes new avenues for future research. |
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Results 1-5 of 58
Page v
... Foreign Direct Investment and Externalities: The Case for Public Intervention Garrick Blalock and Paul J. Gertler 5 R&D Activities of Foreign and National Establishments in Turkish Manufacturing Asim Erdilek 6 Foreign Direct Investment ...
... Foreign Direct Investment and Externalities: The Case for Public Intervention Garrick Blalock and Paul J. Gertler 5 R&D Activities of Foreign and National Establishments in Turkish Manufacturing Asim Erdilek 6 Foreign Direct Investment ...
Page 7
... foreign firms in downstream industries is positively correlated with higher ... foreign investors offer to local firms. For example, before an Indonesian firm ... establishments that have been extensively and conscientiously collected by ...
... foreign firms in downstream industries is positively correlated with higher ... foreign investors offer to local firms. For example, before an Indonesian firm ... establishments that have been extensively and conscientiously collected by ...
Page 8
... foreign equity ownership to firms without foreign equity ownership during the 1997–98 Indonesian financial crisis. The ... establishments with the highest external ownership (81 to 100 percent foreign owned) have a lower propensity to ...
... foreign equity ownership to firms without foreign equity ownership during the 1997–98 Indonesian financial crisis. The ... establishments with the highest external ownership (81 to 100 percent foreign owned) have a lower propensity to ...
Page 9
... foreign affiliates than with less closely controlled companies, which ... establishments' productivity—is too narrow. Quite apart from technological ... foreign and domestic. Görg and Strobl's empirical estimations use plant-level data ...
... foreign affiliates than with less closely controlled companies, which ... establishments' productivity—is too narrow. Quite apart from technological ... foreign and domestic. Görg and Strobl's empirical estimations use plant-level data ...
Page 24
... country, and whether these higher wages spill over to domestically owned firms. For both wages and productivity, the spillovers to domestically owned firms or establishments could be either positive or negative. Wage spillovers could be ...
... country, and whether these higher wages spill over to domestically owned firms. For both wages and productivity, the spillovers to domestically owned firms or establishments could be either positive or negative. Wage spillovers could be ...
Contents
1 | |
23 | |
What Do Firm Perceptions Tell Us? | 45 |
The Case for Public Intervention | 73 |
Chapter 5 RD Activities of Foreign and National Establishments in Turkish Manufacturing
| 107 |
Beyond Productivity Spillovers | 137 |
A Critical Survey and a Simple Model | 159 |
Gordon H Hanson | 175 |
Findings and Implications for Models and Policies Toward Trade and Investment | 245 |
Marc J Melitz | 273 |
Chapter 11 How Does FDI Affect Host Country Development? Using Industry Case Studies to Make Reliable Generalizations | 281 |
Review and Evaluation | 315 |
Chapter 13 Is Africas Skepticism of Foreign Capital Justified? Evidence from East African Firm Survey Data | 337 |
Robert Z Lawrence | 367 |
Chapter 14 Conclusions and Implications for FDI Policy in Developing Countries New Methods of Research and a Future Research Agenda | 375 |
About the Contributors | 397 |
Michael P Keane | 179 |
Chapter 8 Does Foreign Direct Investment Accelerate Economic Growth? | 195 |
Chapter 9 Inappropriate Pooling of Wealthy and Poor Countries in Empirical FDI Studies | 221 |
Index | 405 |
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Common terms and phrases
affiliates with high Africa autarky average backward linkages benefits Blomström Blonigen capital China coefficient competition correlation country’s Czech Republic developing countries developing-country domestic firms downstream FDI econometric effects of FDI empirical employment enterprises entry estimates evidence export FDI inflows foreign affiliates Foreign Direct Investment foreign establishments foreign firms foreign investors Foreign ownership group Forfás global Görg higher host country host economy impact important increase indigenous Indonesian industry inputs intermediate International Economics intrafirm trade Javorcik joint ventures Journal Kenya Kokko labor LDCs Lipsey literature manufacturing measure MNCs Moran multinational corporation multinationals OECD OLS Panel OLS output panel data Panel OLS Panel parents pecuniary externalities percent plants positive productivity spillovers R&D activity R&D intensity random-effects regressions sector share Sjöholm Source statistically studies suppliers survey Table Tanzania technology transfer trade intrafirm Uganda UNCTAD value added variable vertical wages World Bank