Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Economic, Institutional & Political Determinant...

Electronic data

View graph of relations

Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries. / Elkomy, Shimaa ; Ingham, Hilary; Read, Robert.
Lancaster: Lancaster University, Department of Economics, 2015. (Economics Working Paper Series ).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Elkomy, S, Ingham, H & Read, R 2015 'Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries' Economics Working Paper Series , Lancaster University, Department of Economics, Lancaster.

APA

Elkomy, S., Ingham, H., & Read, R. (2015). Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries. (Economics Working Paper Series ). Lancaster University, Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Elkomy S, Ingham H, Read R. Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries. Lancaster: Lancaster University, Department of Economics. 2015 Oct. (Economics Working Paper Series ).

Author

Elkomy, Shimaa ; Ingham, Hilary ; Read, Robert. / Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries. Lancaster : Lancaster University, Department of Economics, 2015. (Economics Working Paper Series ).

Bibtex

@techreport{42f24daa457b4fc5a22ba1e8562e1425,
title = "Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries",
abstract = "This study investigates the role of income levels, using the World Bank income classification, and political development, using EIU Democracy Index scores, in determining the magnitude of FDI growth effects for a panel of 61 emerging and developing countries for the period 1989 to 2013. It tests a baseline growth model incorporating these variables which is then extended to include FDI interaction effects with human capital, measured using secondary school enrolment data, and political development. The separate growth effects of FDI are then tested separately for each of the three lower World Bank income classifications (Upper-Middle, Lower-Middle and Low Income) followed by three categories of political regime type derived from Democracy Index. The effects of FDI are found to vary significantly between income classifications with the strongest growth effects in Low Income countries and weaker negative effects in Upper-Middle Income countries. The growth interaction effects between FDI and human capital are found to be strongly positive regardless of regime type. Political development in conjunction with FDI appears to suppress the growth effects of FDI in authoritarian countries while enhancing them in {\textquoteleft}hybrid{\textquoteright} democracies. For more democratic countries, human capital is a more important driver of growth than FDI but this is the outcome of strongly positive interaction effects between FDI and human capital outweighing negative effects for human capital on its own. The paper also provides some support for the view that a critical threshold of human capital is required to generate beneficial spillover growth effects from inflows of FDI. This paper provides new and more detailed insights into the growth effects of FDI with particular respect to income classification and political regime type in emerging and developing countries.",
keywords = "Foreign direct investment, economic growth, developing countries, income level, political development, panel analysis",
author = "Shimaa Elkomy and Hilary Ingham and Robert Read",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Paper Series ",
publisher = "Lancaster University, Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Lancaster University, Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries

AU - Elkomy, Shimaa

AU - Ingham, Hilary

AU - Read, Robert

PY - 2015/10

Y1 - 2015/10

N2 - This study investigates the role of income levels, using the World Bank income classification, and political development, using EIU Democracy Index scores, in determining the magnitude of FDI growth effects for a panel of 61 emerging and developing countries for the period 1989 to 2013. It tests a baseline growth model incorporating these variables which is then extended to include FDI interaction effects with human capital, measured using secondary school enrolment data, and political development. The separate growth effects of FDI are then tested separately for each of the three lower World Bank income classifications (Upper-Middle, Lower-Middle and Low Income) followed by three categories of political regime type derived from Democracy Index. The effects of FDI are found to vary significantly between income classifications with the strongest growth effects in Low Income countries and weaker negative effects in Upper-Middle Income countries. The growth interaction effects between FDI and human capital are found to be strongly positive regardless of regime type. Political development in conjunction with FDI appears to suppress the growth effects of FDI in authoritarian countries while enhancing them in ‘hybrid’ democracies. For more democratic countries, human capital is a more important driver of growth than FDI but this is the outcome of strongly positive interaction effects between FDI and human capital outweighing negative effects for human capital on its own. The paper also provides some support for the view that a critical threshold of human capital is required to generate beneficial spillover growth effects from inflows of FDI. This paper provides new and more detailed insights into the growth effects of FDI with particular respect to income classification and political regime type in emerging and developing countries.

AB - This study investigates the role of income levels, using the World Bank income classification, and political development, using EIU Democracy Index scores, in determining the magnitude of FDI growth effects for a panel of 61 emerging and developing countries for the period 1989 to 2013. It tests a baseline growth model incorporating these variables which is then extended to include FDI interaction effects with human capital, measured using secondary school enrolment data, and political development. The separate growth effects of FDI are then tested separately for each of the three lower World Bank income classifications (Upper-Middle, Lower-Middle and Low Income) followed by three categories of political regime type derived from Democracy Index. The effects of FDI are found to vary significantly between income classifications with the strongest growth effects in Low Income countries and weaker negative effects in Upper-Middle Income countries. The growth interaction effects between FDI and human capital are found to be strongly positive regardless of regime type. Political development in conjunction with FDI appears to suppress the growth effects of FDI in authoritarian countries while enhancing them in ‘hybrid’ democracies. For more democratic countries, human capital is a more important driver of growth than FDI but this is the outcome of strongly positive interaction effects between FDI and human capital outweighing negative effects for human capital on its own. The paper also provides some support for the view that a critical threshold of human capital is required to generate beneficial spillover growth effects from inflows of FDI. This paper provides new and more detailed insights into the growth effects of FDI with particular respect to income classification and political regime type in emerging and developing countries.

KW - Foreign direct investment

KW - economic growth

KW - developing countries

KW - income level

KW - political development

KW - panel analysis

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Paper Series

BT - Economic, Institutional & Political Determinants of FDI Growth Effects in Emerging & Developing Countries

PB - Lancaster University, Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster

ER -