Title: FDI AND EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS: Bad News, Good News,
1- FDI AND EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS Bad News, Good
News, - Surprising News
-
- Policies Issues for Developed, Developing
Countries, - and Multilateral Lending Institutions
- Theodore H. MoranMarcus Wallenberg Professor
- of International Business and FinanceSchool of
Foreign ServiceGeorgetown University
2Foreign direct investment comes in three
perhaps four -- distinct forms
3- FDI in manufacturing and assembly
4- FDI in extractive industries (oil, gas, and
mining)
5- FDI in infrastructure (power generation,
electrical utilities, water and sewerage, toll
roads, airports, telecommunications) and
6- FDI in services (usually included within the
category of FDI in manufacturing and assembly)
7Manufacturing FDI takes two distinct forms.
8- The major distinction is between FDI that is
oriented toward domestic markets (often protected
domestic markets), and
9- FDI that is oriented toward export markets (in
particular destined to be an integral part of the
parent MNCs global supply chain).
10The Bad News
- As part of the disillusionment with efforts at
import substitution, the evidence from FDI that
was used by host authorities within protected
host markets began to show quite dismal results
in the 1980s and 1990s.
11Performance Requirements
- A prominent feature of the import-substitution-via
-FDI strategy was to impose what were called
performance requirements on the foreign
investors as a condition of their being granted
access to the domestic economy
12- the most frequent performance requirements were
- domestic content requirements,
- joint venture requirements,
- and other technology sharing requirements.
13- Cost-benefit analyzes of individual FDI projects
oriented toward protected domestic markets
valuing all inputs and outputs at world prices
showed that the great majority subtracted from
host economic welfare, and retarded the prospects
for broader development.
14The Good News
- The alternative strategy using FDI in
manufacturing and assembly to bolster
export-led growth held pleasant surprises.
15- The evidence of the 1990s and early 2000s showed
a pattern that was much more intimate than a
search for inexpensive parts.
16- The international parent exercises what has come
to be characterized with the phrase parental
supervision over all stages and supply
relationships, with real-time upgrading of
technology and management.
17- Multinational corporate investment in the
developing world is conventionally pictured as
flowing into least-skilled sweatshop-type jobs.
18But the data show that the flow of foreign direct
investment to medium-skilled industrial sectors
in developing countries
19- such as electrical equipment,
- electronics,
- semiconductors,
- autos and auto parts,
- industrial machinery,
- chemicals and chemical products
20- is more than ten times larger each year than the
flow to low-skill, labor-intensive operations,
and speeding up over time.
21Here multinational investors pay their workers
- two to three times as much for basic production
jobs, - and perhaps ten times as much for more technical
and supervisor positions, - in comparison to what is earned by employees in
comparable positions in lower-skilled MNE
operations.
22The Surprising News
- Many development strategists had feared the
using-FDI-for-export-led-growth approach would
leave the host countries taking part only in the
most simple assembly operations, with little
value added and no backward linkages.
23- But the data, over time, have indicated otherwise.
24- Evidence from the past two decades has shown
25Contract Manufacturing
- that the most powerful mechanism for backward
linkages from foreign multinationals to local
firms has been the phenomenon of contract
manufacturing of the latter for the former.
26 As part of this process, many local firms become
certified as Original Equipment Manufacturers
(OEM), qualifying them to supply the MNC parent
anyplace in the world.
27Well Constructed Econometric Studies
- Garrick Blalock and Paul J. Gertler. Welfare
gains from foreign direct investment through
technology transfer to local suppliers. Journal
of International Economics. Forthcoming. - Javorcik, Beata Smarzynska Does FDI increase the
productivity of domestic firms? In search of
spillovers through backward linkages. American
Economic Review 94(3). 2004.
28- Latest generation of econometric studies show
abundant externalities in the vertical direction.
29- financing and advance payment
- training of employees
- help with quality control
- lending/leasing equipment
- supplying production technology
- and organizing production lines initiation to
exporting.
30Policy Implications for Developing Countries
31- In the Hong Kong Ministerial, developing
countries have now been empowered to demand that
foreign investors meet old and new kinds of
performance requirements for no less than seven
more years, and possibly until 2020.
32- Governments that actually pursue this strategy
are sorely misguided about how foreign direct
investment can best contribute to host country
growth and welfare.
33Policy Implications for Multilateral Lending
Institutions
34- Information market failures and FDI promotion
- Genuine business climate reform with champions,
policy advocacy.
35- Policy Implications for Developed Countries
36- Outward FDI and the Great Sucking Sound?
- Or, outward FDI as a win-win process for
developed and developing countries?