Title: Foreign Direct Investment and Third World Development
1Foreign Direct Investment and Third World
Development
2Definition of FDI
- A firm from one country buys a controlling
investment in a firm in another country or where
a firm sets up a branch or subsidiary in another
country - Portfolio investment firm purchase stocks/shares
in other companies purely financial reasons
(profits from rising stock price or
diversification of assets)
3Global Trends in FDI
- During the 1960s, FDI grew at twice the rate of
global gross national product and 40 percent
faster than world exports - During the 1970s and the first half of the 1980s,
FDI and exports grew more or less in parallel - After the mid-1980, FDI grew much faster than
trade the primary mechanism of integration has
shifted from trade to FDI
4Growth of FDI
5Who Makes Noise?
- Transnational Corporations
- Two Thirds of World Exports
- Intra-firm trade is one-third of total world
trade - 60,000 parent firms with 700,000 foreign
affiliates - Two investment strategies of TNCs
- Greenfield investment
- Mergers and Acquisitions
6TNCs and Trade Theory
- If significant portion of trade occurs within
transnational corporations, what aspects of
international trade theory we need to think
again? - External market prices vs. internal decisions of
TNCs
7Changing Landscape of FDI Flows
- From the 1950s to the mid-1970s, US firms
accounted for between 40 and 50 percent of the
world total - In 1960s, US and UK combined accounted for two
thirds of world FDI - By 1985, US-UK share fell to around 50 percent
- In 1990s, developing countries started to make
FDI through their TNCs
8Major Players in Global FDI
9The Rise of Developing Countries in Global FDI
10Destinations of Global FDI
- 67 percent of world FDI stock in 2000 went to
developed economies - Before World War II, some 65 percent of the
worlds FDI was located in developing countries - Changes in the relative position of developed
countries - US in 1975, its outward FDI was 4.5 times
greater than its inward FDI since then US
become significantly important as an FDI
destination
11Destinations of Global FDI
- Changes in the relative position of developed
countries (Cont) - Europe between 1975-1985, inward FDI in Europe
fell from 41 percent to 33 percent of the world
total by 2000, its share rose to 40 percent - What would be the reason behind Europes
resurgence as FDI destination during the 1990s? - Intra-European FDI all major European countries
send over 50 percent of their total FDI in Europe
12Destinations of Global FDI
- Changes in the relative position of developed
countries (Cont) - Japan 11.7 percent of total world outward FDI
and 0.5 percent of total inward FDI - What may be the reasons behind this anomaly in
Japan?
13Destinations of Global FDI
- Changes in the relative position of developing
countries - What are the geographical characteristics of
inward FDI flows to developing countries?
14Inward FDI to Developing countries
15Importance of FDI to host countries
- Relative importance of FDI, measured as
percentage share of GDP, has increased in most
major developed economies and developing economies
16Inward FDI as a share of GDP
17Foreign Branch Plants and Economic Growth
- What is your opinion about the following
statements? - What is good for General Motors is good for
America - The growth of large corporations is good for the
countries that they operate
18Multiplier vs. Leakage
- Multiplier effects the positive economic
benefits driven by initial FDI inflow - Leakage potential beneficial effects leak out of
the locality to benefit other places abroad - What would be the bottom line of FDI? The bottom
line can make the efforts to attract FDI
justified or not.
19Flows and Stocks of FDI
20Impacts of FDI
- Monetary Flows
- Gains and Losses for Countries/Regions
- Gains and Losses for Corporations
- Transfer Pricing
- Impact on Local Firms
- Technological Transfer
- Labor
- FDI and the State
21Monetary Flows
- Balance-of-payments
- Do FDI inflows exceed FDI outflows?
22Gains and Losses for Countries
23Gains and Losses for Countries
- Some issues regarding interpreting FDI inflows
- FDI inflows may not stay in Third World
countries FDI inflows are mainly spent on wages,
machinery, buildings and other fixed equipments
that are from developed countries - New FDI since the 1980s are mainly in the form of
MAs, privatization, debt for equity swaps FDI
has led to ownership transfer rather than
investment in production capacity
24Gains and Losses for Corporations
- Are corporations making money through FDI?
25Gains and Losses for Corporations
- The higher profits in developing countries may be
attributable as much to the ability of TNCs to
negotiate profitable terms as to the efficiency
of its third world branch plants
26Transfer Pricing
27Transfer Pricing
- According to one study, on average, the price
paid by TNC branch plants in Colombia for inputs
imported from other branches of the same
corporation250 of the open market price for
pharmaceuticals inputs, and 125-150 of the
market price for other inputs - Why do TNC charge more for their own branch?
28Transfer Pricing
- FDI proponents transfer pricing is simply a way
to fix distorted market price - FDI critics transfer pricing makes governments
policy to keep benefits of FDI within their
boundaries - It can be hypocritical to castigate government
for engaging in international dumping practices
when transfer pricing by corporations is neither
criticized nor regulated
29Impact on Local Firms
- The presence of branch plants may stimulate
demand for, and investment in, local firms that
buy from or sell to the branch plant - Local linkage of branch plants
- In 1987, Japanese electronics branch plants in
Asia were purchasing just 36 locally - What kinds of local linkages Distribution of
benefits from local linkages
30Impact on Local Firms
- More competition to local firms that produce the
same commodity of branch plants - Pro-FDI branch plants will result in more
competition and as a result more efficient local
firms - Anti-FDI collapse of local firms due to stronger
branch of TNCs increasing dependence on TNCs - Technological Transfer
- Little evidence that TNCs carry out RD
activities in third world host countries - Between 67 and 90 of RD investment by American
and European TNCs stays at home