Home country effects of foreign direct investment: From a small economy to a large economy |
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Authors: | Hsiu-Yun Lee Kenneth S. Lin Hsiao-Chien Tsui |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Economics, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan;bDepartment of Economics, National Taiwan University, Taiwan;cDepartment of Economics, National Chung Cheng University, 168 University Rd., Ming-Hsiung, Chia-Yi 621, Taiwan |
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Abstract: | Previous studies on home country effects mainly focused on FDI from large developed economies to other countries. But today's super recipient is a relatively larger economy than its investors and many of these investors are not classified as “developed economies.” A simple Ak type model implies that a small and more developed country investing in a large and less developed country will experience decreases in both employment and income disparity (compared to the recipient country) as the less-developed recipient country gains the higher technology of production through FDI inflows. The empirical results for the Four Tigers (source countries) and China (recipient country) are consistent with our theoretical model of FDI outflows. We also find that FDI outflows to China decrease the ratio of exports to GDP only for small source countries, even though a higher investment in China raises the share of these countries' exports-to-China to China's total imports. |
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Keywords: | Foreign direct investment Capital outflows Home country effects |
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