Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment

Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment

Author: Aysa Erdogan

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 16

ISBN-13:

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Attracting foreign direct investment (FDI) is considered as an important source of sustainable development, income growth and employment for developing countries. Foreign-owned firms are believed to have the potential to benefit the domestic firms by the spillover of their technological know-how, innovation capability, and marketing and management skills. These spillovers are expected to result in an increase in the productivity of the domestic firms. This paper reviews the empirical literature on spillovers from FDI. Studies have found conflicting evidence on the spillover effects. While some of the studies find that there exist positive spillovers from foreign-owned firms, some others find no spillover effects. A considerable number of studies find that productivity spillovers from FDI are dependent on the absorptive capacity of the domestic firms and technical proximity of foreign-owned firms and domestically-owned firms.


Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Countries

Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Countries

Author: Rossitza B. Wooster

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This paper reviews the empirical literature on technology spillovers from foreign direct investment (FDI) in developing countries. The sample includes 32 studies that model the contribution of FDI presence to local productivity in the host country through spillover effects such as those associated with technology transfer and superior managerial know-how. In our quantitative meta-analysis, study estimates of spillover effects are regressed on a number of study characteristics in order to determine what aspects of study design and data characteristics explain the magnitude, significance, and direction of spillovers from FDI. The meta-regression results suggest that spillover effects are more pronounced when studies measure the effect of FDI spillovers on output, and are more likely to be significant and positive for Asian countries. Results also highlight the possibility that the documented spillover effects from FDI in developing countries may be partly a product of model misspecification.


Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment

Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment

Author: Katarzyna Zukowska-Gagelmann

Publisher: Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 205

ISBN-13: 9783631374412

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Along with privatisation, foreign direct investment (FDI) is commonly viewed as one of the main channels for industrial restructuring in transition countries in Central and Eastern Europe. This analysis focuses on how FDI may contribute to restructuring through the generation of productivity spillovers in locally-owned firms. Using comprehensive data for Polish manufacturing, the study suggests that it benefits on average from a higher presence of foreign firms. However, positive productivity spillovers are absent so far. Economic theories suggest that a too high technological gap between foreign and local firms, the state ownership and low competition level hinder the emergence of positive spillovers.


Foreign Direct Investment, China and the World Economy

Foreign Direct Investment, China and the World Economy

Author: P. Buckley

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2009-11-29

Total Pages: 438

ISBN-13: 0230248322

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China has become such an important element of the global economy that its influence cannot be ignored in almost any field of endeavour. The phenomenal impact of FDI in China and its (largely trade-related) consequences has been well documented and now there is a significant literature on the phenomenon of outward investment from China too. This book is an in depth study of the international business relationships of China covering both inward and outward foreign direct investment, its impact and related theoretical and policy issues. This volume of highly renowned author Peter Buckley's collected papers from 2005-8 continues his interest in the theory of international business (Section I) and policies towards foreign direct investment (FDI) (Section IV) but has a major concentration on China, both as regards outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) from China (Section II) and FDI in China (Section III).


Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment

Productivity Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment

Author: Lan Phi Nguyen

Publisher:

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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The paper examines the effects of foreign direct investment (FDI) on a domestic firm's productivity in Vietnamese manufacturing industries. In contrast with most previous studies, the paper focuses on the FDI spillover effects taking place through both horizontal and vertical linkages and studies the variance of FDI spillovers across regions of Vietnam. Our findings are: FDI generates strong and positive spillover effects on a domestic firm's productivity through both horizontal and backward linkages; the Vietnamese regions benefit from the FDI spillovers but the spillover effects are very different from region to region; private firms have strong linkages through technical assistance and technology transfer with foreign invested firms while linkages of state owned enterprises (SOEs) with foreign invested firms are very weak; domestic firms with higher human capital stock, better financial development and lower technology gap will get more benefits from FDI spillovers and therefore they will have higher productivity.


DOES IT MATTER WHERE YOU COME FROM? Vertical Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment and the Nationality of Investors

DOES IT MATTER WHERE YOU COME FROM? Vertical Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment and the Nationality of Investors

Author: Kamal Saggi, Beata K. Smarzynska Javorcik

Publisher: World Bank Publications

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 22

ISBN-13:

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"Javorcik, Saggi, and Spatareanu use a firm-level panel data set from Romania to examine whether the nationality of foreign investors affects the degree of vertical spillovers from foreign direct investment. Investors' country of origin may matter for spillovers to domestic producers in upstream sectors (supplying intermediate inputs) in two ways. First, the share of intermediate inputs sourced by multinationals from a host country is likely to increase with the distance between the host and the source economy. Second, the sourcing pattern is likely to be affected by preferential trade agreements that cover some but not other source economies. In this case, the Association Agreement signed between Romania and the European Union (EU) implies that inputs sourced from the EU are subject to a lower tariff than inputs sourced from America or Asia. Moreover, while for European investors intermediate inputs sourced from home country suppliers comply with the rules of origin and thus can be exported to the EU on preferential terms, this would not be the case for home country suppliers of American or Asian multinationals. Therefore, one would expect that American and Asian investors source more from Romania than EU investors and thus present greater potential for vertical spillovers. The empirical analysis produces evidence in support of the authors' hypothesis. They find a positive association between the presence of.