The Geography of International Investment
Much foreign direct investment is between high-income countries, but investment in some developing and transition regions, while still modest, grew rapidly in the 1990s. Adjusting for market size, much investment stays close to home; adjusting for...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/05/693310/geography-international-investment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18843 |
Summary: | Much foreign direct investment is
between high-income countries, but investment in some
developing and transition regions, while still modest, grew
rapidly in the 1990s. Adjusting for market size, much
investment stays close to home; adjusting for distance, much
heads toward the countries with the biggest markets. Foreign
direct investment is more geographically concentrated than
either exports, or production. Thus, U.S. affiliate
production in Europe, is 7 times US exports to Europe; that
ratio drops to 4 for all industrial countries, and to 1.6
for developing countries. Multinational activity in
high-income countries is overwhelmingly horizontal,
involving production for sale to the host country market. In
developing countries, a greater proportion of multinational
activity is "vertical", involving manufacturing at
intermediate stages of production. Thus, only four percent
of US affiliate production in the European Union (EU) is
sold back to the United States, whereas for developing
countries, the figure is eighteen percent, rising to forty
percent for Mexico. Similarly, less than ten percent of
Japan's affiliate production in the EU is sold back to
Japan, compared with more than twenty percent in developing
countries. In models of horizontal activity, the decision to
go multinational, is a tradeoff between the additional fixed
costs involved in setting up a new plant, and the savings in
variable costs (transport costs, and tariffs) on exports. In
models of vertical activity, direct investment is motivated
by differences in factor prices) and discourage it (by
making trade between headquarters , and an affiliate more
expensive). The major outward investors carry out much
horizontal investment in large markets. For US investors,
this means Europe, especially the United Kingdom; for Japan
and Europe, it means the United States. Most EU investments,
however, stay within the EU. The major outward investors
carry out much of their vertical investment closer to home:
the United States, in Mexico; the EU, in Central and Eastern
Europe; Japan, in Asia. |
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