The Effect of FDI on Economic Growth in LowIncome Countries
Randolph L Bruno1, Nauro F Campos 2
Universita’ di Perugia, November 8, 2010
November 8, 2010
1University of Birmingham, United Kingdom and IZA
2Brunel University, London, CEPR and IZA
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 1 / 20
Outline
1 Introduction and Definitions
2 Motivation and Preview of Results
3 Literature
4 Data
5 ResultsAverage EffectThe impact of study designThe impact of Publication BiasDiscussion
6 Conclusions
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 2 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
How do scholars define Foreign Direct Investment?Stocks and Flows
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the investment that is made witha view to acquiring a lasting interest in a foreign enterprise, and ofhaving an effective voice in its management (IMF definition);
This exclude quick speculative investment;
FDI are investments made OUTSIDE the home country of theinvestors, but INSIDE the investing company;FDI = equity capital; reinvested earnings;In case of FDI, control remains with the investors, in other wordsan effective voice in the management;FDI = package of assets and intermediate products such ascapital, technology, management skills, access to markets andentrepreneurship.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 3 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Introduction and Definitions
Types of FDI: Why do firms pursue FDI?
1 Resources seeking (supply oriented):Physical resources (for instance: energy sector);Human resources (cheap labour);
2 Market seeking (demand oriented):Domestic market;Adjacent (e.g. regional) markets;
3 Efficiency seeking:Rationalisation of production to exploit economies of specialisationand scope across value chain (product specialisation) and alongvalue chain (process specialisation);
4 Strategic asset seeking:To protect or augment ownership specific advantages of theinvesting firm (technology, organisational capabilities, markets)and/or to reduce those of their competitors.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 4 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Foreign Direct Investment and GrowthLow and Middle Income Countries
This seminar will focus on the impact of FDI on economic growthin low in comparison with middle income countries;In 2008 FDI inflows to Emerging markets was lower than theinflows to developed countries;Estimates for 2009 indicate a reversal, i.e. comparable or higherpercentage of FDI inflows in Emerging Economies with respect toadvanced economies [EIU (2010)];We analyse how the literature has developed in recent decades,especially by exploiting firm-level studies;In other words we perform a statistical analysis of many othersstatistical analyses, this is why is called META-analysis;*[On a more technical note] We split the reported effect of FDI onGrowth between macro and micro studies because we want tocapture the net versus the gross effect of this impact.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 5 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Preview of Results
Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, but smalleffect of FDI from the micro evidence (4.5% partial correlation, ona [0,1] scale);Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, andsomehow bigger (9.6%), effect of FDI from the preliminary macroevidence;On the one hand, we do observe quite a lot of countryheterogeneity (countries’ behavior statistically different form eachother);On the other hand, we do not observe much of a geographicalarea heterogeneity (geographical areas do not result beingstatistically different form each other), with the exception oftransition countries (ex communist countries), which performbetter.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 6 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Preview of Results
Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, but smalleffect of FDI from the micro evidence (4.5% partial correlation, ona [0,1] scale);Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, andsomehow bigger (9.6%), effect of FDI from the preliminary macroevidence;On the one hand, we do observe quite a lot of countryheterogeneity (countries’ behavior statistically different form eachother);On the other hand, we do not observe much of a geographicalarea heterogeneity (geographical areas do not result beingstatistically different form each other), with the exception oftransition countries (ex communist countries), which performbetter.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 6 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Preview of Results
Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, but smalleffect of FDI from the micro evidence (4.5% partial correlation, ona [0,1] scale);Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, andsomehow bigger (9.6%), effect of FDI from the preliminary macroevidence;On the one hand, we do observe quite a lot of countryheterogeneity (countries’ behavior statistically different form eachother);On the other hand, we do not observe much of a geographicalarea heterogeneity (geographical areas do not result beingstatistically different form each other), with the exception oftransition countries (ex communist countries), which performbetter.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 6 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Preview of Results
Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, but smalleffect of FDI from the micro evidence (4.5% partial correlation, ona [0,1] scale);Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, andsomehow bigger (9.6%), effect of FDI from the preliminary macroevidence;On the one hand, we do observe quite a lot of countryheterogeneity (countries’ behavior statistically different form eachother);On the other hand, we do not observe much of a geographicalarea heterogeneity (geographical areas do not result beingstatistically different form each other), with the exception oftransition countries (ex communist countries), which performbetter.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 6 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
Preview of Results
Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, but smalleffect of FDI from the micro evidence (4.5% partial correlation, ona [0,1] scale);Our empirical work confirms the existence of positive, andsomehow bigger (9.6%), effect of FDI from the preliminary macroevidence;On the one hand, we do observe quite a lot of countryheterogeneity (countries’ behavior statistically different form eachother);On the other hand, we do not observe much of a geographicalarea heterogeneity (geographical areas do not result beingstatistically different form each other), with the exception oftransition countries (ex communist countries), which performbetter.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 6 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
LICs versus Middle Income
One main finding is that the effect of FDI on growth issignificantly greater in low- than in lower- and upper middleincome countriesFOOD FOR THOUGHT AND OPEN DISCUSSION:
Could you find reasons in favour?Could you find reasons against?
*[On a more technical note] We cover both published andunpublished papers and we do find sign of publication selectionbias.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 7 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
LICs versus Middle Income
One main finding is that the effect of FDI on growth issignificantly greater in low- than in lower- and upper middleincome countriesFOOD FOR THOUGHT AND OPEN DISCUSSION:
Could you find reasons in favour?Could you find reasons against?
*[On a more technical note] We cover both published andunpublished papers and we do find sign of publication selectionbias.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 7 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
LICs versus Middle Income
One main finding is that the effect of FDI on growth issignificantly greater in low- than in lower- and upper middleincome countriesFOOD FOR THOUGHT AND OPEN DISCUSSION:
Could you find reasons in favour?Could you find reasons against?
*[On a more technical note] We cover both published andunpublished papers and we do find sign of publication selectionbias.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 7 / 20
Motivation and Preview of Results
LICs versus Middle Income
One main finding is that the effect of FDI on growth issignificantly greater in low- than in lower- and upper middleincome countriesFOOD FOR THOUGHT AND OPEN DISCUSSION:
Could you find reasons in favour?Could you find reasons against?
*[On a more technical note] We cover both published andunpublished papers and we do find sign of publication selectionbias.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 7 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI & DevelopmentSeveral studies document important effects -positive or negative-on host countries growth, let us review some of them:
the technological upgrading via the demonstration effect: advancedfirms in non advanced countries demonstrate how to build up hightech industries products to them [POSITIVE];technology sourcing: firms relocate in advanced countries in orderto learn. i.e. source the technology from them[POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];market stealing effect: via increased competition MNCs increasetheir market share and displace domestic firms [NEGATIVE];Transfer of skilled labour from MNCs to domestic firms andvice-versa [POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 8 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI & DevelopmentSeveral studies document important effects -positive or negative-on host countries growth, let us review some of them:
the technological upgrading via the demonstration effect: advancedfirms in non advanced countries demonstrate how to build up hightech industries products to them [POSITIVE];technology sourcing: firms relocate in advanced countries in orderto learn. i.e. source the technology from them[POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];market stealing effect: via increased competition MNCs increasetheir market share and displace domestic firms [NEGATIVE];Transfer of skilled labour from MNCs to domestic firms andvice-versa [POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 8 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI & DevelopmentSeveral studies document important effects -positive or negative-on host countries growth, let us review some of them:
the technological upgrading via the demonstration effect: advancedfirms in non advanced countries demonstrate how to build up hightech industries products to them [POSITIVE];technology sourcing: firms relocate in advanced countries in orderto learn. i.e. source the technology from them[POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];market stealing effect: via increased competition MNCs increasetheir market share and displace domestic firms [NEGATIVE];Transfer of skilled labour from MNCs to domestic firms andvice-versa [POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 8 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI & DevelopmentSeveral studies document important effects -positive or negative-on host countries growth, let us review some of them:
the technological upgrading via the demonstration effect: advancedfirms in non advanced countries demonstrate how to build up hightech industries products to them [POSITIVE];technology sourcing: firms relocate in advanced countries in orderto learn. i.e. source the technology from them[POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];market stealing effect: via increased competition MNCs increasetheir market share and displace domestic firms [NEGATIVE];Transfer of skilled labour from MNCs to domestic firms andvice-versa [POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 8 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI & DevelopmentSeveral studies document important effects -positive or negative-on host countries growth, let us review some of them:
the technological upgrading via the demonstration effect: advancedfirms in non advanced countries demonstrate how to build up hightech industries products to them [POSITIVE];technology sourcing: firms relocate in advanced countries in orderto learn. i.e. source the technology from them[POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];market stealing effect: via increased competition MNCs increasetheir market share and displace domestic firms [NEGATIVE];Transfer of skilled labour from MNCs to domestic firms andvice-versa [POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 8 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI & DevelopmentSeveral studies document important effects -positive or negative-on host countries growth, let us review some of them:
the technological upgrading via the demonstration effect: advancedfirms in non advanced countries demonstrate how to build up hightech industries products to them [POSITIVE];technology sourcing: firms relocate in advanced countries in orderto learn. i.e. source the technology from them[POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];market stealing effect: via increased competition MNCs increasetheir market share and displace domestic firms [NEGATIVE];Transfer of skilled labour from MNCs to domestic firms andvice-versa [POSITIVE/NEGATIVE];
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 8 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature
FDI and DevelopmentDue to the existence of many channels there is no conclusiveprediction [+ OR -]:
level of development matters;absorptive capability matters;FDI type and motivation (market seeking, efficiency seeking)matter;type of growth concept (i.e. data used for the analysis) matters!
FDI limited development impact in emerging markets:
[Asiedu (2006)];[Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng (2007)];[Spencer (2008)].
Some topical papers on MNCs theory: Hymer (1960) and (1976);[Vernon (1966)]; [Caves (1974)]; [Rugman (1981)];[Dunning (1988)]; [Haddad and Harrison (1993)].
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 9 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Literature
The literature (cont.ed)
*[On a more technical note] META Analysis on FDISeminal : [Gorg and Strobl (2001)]. Very small sample though;Developing Countries: [Wooster and Diebel (2006)]. 32 Studies(27 published and 5 WPs), 141 observations. 21 countries;Role of level of economic development :[Meyer and Sinani (2009)]. Both developed and developingcountries;Emerging European Markets:[Hanousek, Koceda and Maurel (2009)]. Transition countries.Updated Evidence: [Havrenek and Irsova (2010)]. 67 studies, 97observations.Cross Countries:[Doucouliagos, Iamsiraroj and Ulubasoglu (2010)]. FDI-growthrelationship in cross sections: 880 observations.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 10 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
Statistical Data Construction: How the Studies wereSelected
We identify 143 Low and Middle income countries (for examplesee www.data.worldbank.org/country);We use the following research engines Scholar.Google, Scopus,Publish or Perish, SSRN to discover as many paper as possible;We standardize the search criteria, i.e. use of KEY WORDS;
Micro ’FDI + country’ & ’Foreign Direct Investment + country’;Macro: We add the keyword ’cross section’ + ’TFP’ + ’growth’ (butalso MNCs and TNCs);
We also use ’snowballing’: look at the references in topical papers;Selection of papers conditional to relevance and econometricanalysis, though:
Micro 105 (556 observations);Macro 9 (19 obs), preliminary.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 11 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
*[On a more technical note] Empirical Model
Our initial estimated equation assumes the following specification
rij = β0 + vij ;rij = β0 + B× Z + vij ;
rij is the partial correlation coefficient for the the j th estimationwithin the i th paper;β0 is the average effect and vij the idiosyncratic ij error;B× Z is the additional term to take into account the studycharacteristics:
FDI and growth variables’ definition; sample characteristics; type orFDI-growth relationship analysed; econometric methodology; timeperiod of analysisgeographical areas/countries/level of development breakdown;
We run the regression weighted and un-weighted by precision(1/seij); errors are clustered at the level of the paper;
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 12 / 20
Data
Funnel Plot: a Pictorial Graph of the effect
020
0040
0060
0080
0010
000
prec
isio
n
-.5 0 .5 1r
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 13 / 20
Data
Bar Chart: a statistical distributionNumber of a) - Significant. b) Insignificant. c) + Significant. coefficients in the studies
0
10
20
30
40
50
Negative
Sig. Insignificant
Low income
Lower Middle Income
Upper Middle Income
InsignificantPositive Sig.
Upper Middle Income
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 14 / 20
Results Average Effect
Table 1: Regressions on the mean: Firm Level
Micro
Sensitivity(1) (2) (3) (4)
Full sample 1/se < 25000 1/se < 15000 1/se < 10000
Un-weighted 0.049*** 0.049*** 0.049*** 0.048***(0.008) (0.011) (0.011) (0.011)
Weighted 0.17 0.045 0.034 0.011(0.000) (0.023) (0.021) (0.012)
Observations 556 554 549 546N. Cluster (N. Papers) 105 105 104 104
Clustered SE in parentheses. Regression testing for different sample, where ’outliers’ are selected according to precision.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 15 / 20
Results Average Effect
Table 1: Regressions on the mean: Macro Level
Macro
Sensitivity(1) (2) (3) (4)
Full sample 1/se < 600 1/se < 400 1/se < 200
Un-weighted 0.184** 0.186** 0.186** 0.205**(0.065) (0.070) (0.070) (0.068)
Weighted 0.096** 0.057*** 0.057*** 0.073**(0.037) (0.010) (0.010) (0.026)
Observations 19 18 18 16N. Cluster 9 8 8 8
Clustered SE in parentheses. Regression testing for different sample, where ’outliers’ are selected according to precision.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 16 / 20
Results The impact of study design
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
Selected Whole Low Middle Low Lower UpperVariables sample & Lower M. Middle Middle
Dummy = 1 if FDI direct effect 0.067* 0.067* 0.021** 0.021** 0.149***(omitted indirect) (0.039) (0.040) (0.009) (0.010) (0.008)
Dummy = 1 if Vertical FDI spillover 0.039*** -0.005 0.040*** 0.020*** 0.020*** 0.139***(omitted horizontal) (0.014) (0.023) (0.014) (0.007) (0.007) (0.029)
Dummy = 1 if Firm level data -0.197*** -0.095* -0.198*** -0.199*** -0.200*** -0.063(omitted sector) (0.029) (0.031) (0.03) (0.03) (0.031) (0.047)
Dummy = 1 if Human capital -0.117*** -0.117*** -0.159*** -0.160*** 0.033labour quality controlled for (0.032) (0.032) (0.042) (0.043) (0.031)
Dummy = 1 if R&D 0.102*** 0.103*** 0.122*** 0.123*** 0.026controlled for (0.034) (0.035) (0.044) (0.046) (0.023)
Dummy 1 if Endogeneity -0.017 -0.051*** -0.016 -0.013 -0.012 -0.052controlled for (0.012) (0.003) (0.012) (0.009) (0.009) (0.036)
Dummy = 1 if Panel 0.008 -0.049*** -0.076*** -0.077**(0.004) (0.018) (0.028) (0.029)
Observations 423 43 380 287 244 136Adjusted R-squared 0.34 0.84 0.335 0.337 0.331 0.611N. Cluster 83 4 80 51 48 32Mean N◦ Estimates per country 17.6 8.6 20 26.1 40.1 10.5Countries 24 5 19 11 6 13
Country Dummies Y Y Y Y Y Y
* sig. at 10%, ** sig. at 5%, *** sig. at 1%..
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 17 / 20
Results The impact of Publication Bias
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
LHS: t log|t| t log|t| t log|t| t log|t|
Sample Full Full 1se
1se
1se
1se
1se
1se
’000. <15 <15 <10 <10 <5 <5
Intercept 1.978*** -0.072 1.714*** -0.058 2.053*** -0.093 2.104*** -0.066(0.378) (0.257) (0.417) (0.258) (0.362) (0.258) (0.368) (0.26)
1/se 0.001 0.003 0.000* 0.001(0.001) (0.002) (0.000) (0.001)
LnSqrtDF 0.134* 0.131* 0.135** 0.130*(0.068) (0.068) (0.068) (0.068)
H0:LnSqrtDf=1 Rej*** Rej*** Rej*** Rej***
Obs 427 426 425 424 423 422 420 419Clust. 83 83 83 83 83 83 82 82AdR2 0.042 0.016 0.125 0.015 0.002 0.017 0.003 0.015
* sig. at 10%, ** sig. at 5%, *** sig. at 1%..
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 18 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Results Discussion
Study design
Direct Spillover (the relative performance of foreign firms) arerelatively more important for growth;
If indirect, vertical spillovers (in different sectors) are impinging ongrowth more than horizontal (same sector);*[On a more technical note] No major differences between forwardand backward though;
Firm level studies are systematically reporting lower partialcorrelation;Control for Human Capital and R&D decrease the relation shipbetween FDI-growth....Country dummies matter and China seems to under performmany other countries;*[On a more technical note] There is some evidence ofpublications selection bias, but this disappears when when controlfor regression specification.
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 19 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
ConclusionsFDI seems to be moderately correlated with growth in Low andMiddle income countries included in our META regressionanalysis;From our preliminary study we can conclude that the gross effect(micro) is much weaker than the net (macro) effect....but this isprobably due to:
1 Unaccounted spillover in the firm level literature;2 Econometric macro bias: macro studies are more affected by
’omitted variable bias’;
We envisage a further increase of our database (mainly on Macrobut also on Micro);*[On a more technical note] We are exploring a combined way ofweighting the studies both for precision and for quality, e.g.measured as number of citation per years and/or published versusunpublished (as in [Meyer and Sinani (2009)]).
Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20
Conclusions
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Conclusions
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Conclusions
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Bruno and Campos (Un. of Birmingham - Brunel) The Effect of FDI.. November 8, 2010 20 / 20