Session 6 - Political Economy of FDI

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Chapter Eight

The Political Economy of


Foreign Direct Investment
8-3

Political Ideology and FDI

Radical Pragmatic Free


View Nationalism Market

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8-4

The Radical View

• Marxist view: MNE’s exploit less-developed host


countries
- Extract profits
- Give nothing of value in exchange
- Instrument of domination, not development
- Keep less-developed countries relatively backward
and dependent on capitalist nations for investment,
jobs, and technology

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8-5

The Radical View

• By the end of the 1980s radical view was in retreat


- Collapse of communism
- Bad economic performance of countries that embraced the
radical view
- Strong economic performance of countries who embraced
capitalism rather than the radical view

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8-6

The Free Market View

• Nations specialize in goods and services that they can


produce most efficiently
• Resource transfers benefit and strengthen the host
country
• Positive changes in laws and growth of bilateral
agreements attest to strength of free market view
• All countries impose some restrictions on FDI

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8-7

Pragmatic Nationalism

• FDI has benefits and costs


• Allow FDI if benefits outweigh costs
- Block FDI that harms indigenous industry
- Court FDI that is in national interest
• Tax breaks
• Subsidies

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8-8

Summary of Political Ideology

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The Benefits of FDI to


Host Countries

• Four main benefits of FDI for a host country


- Resource-transfer effect
- Employment effect
- Balance-of-Payments effect
- Effect on competition and economic growth
• In a free market view
- Economists argue that the benefits of FDI so outweigh the costs
associated with pragmatic nationalism that it is misguided
- The best policy would be for countries to forgo all intervention in
an MNE’s investment decisions

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8 - 10

Resource-Transfer Effects

• FDI can make a positive contribution to a host


economy by supplying
- Capital

- Technology

- Management

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Employment Effects

• Brings jobs that otherwise would not be created


- Direct: Hiring host-country citizens
- Indirect:
• Jobs created by local suppliers
• Jobs created by increased spending by employees of
the multi-national enterprise

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Balance-of-Payments Effects

• Balance-of-Payments Accounts are divided into two


main sections
- The current account records transactions that pertain to
three categories: merchandise goods, services, and
investment income
- The capital account records transactions that involve the
purchase or sale of assets
• Current account deficits occur when a country imports
more goods, services, and income than it exports
• Current account surpluses occur when a country
exports more goods, services, and income than it
imports

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US Balance of Payment Accounts


for 2004

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Balance-of-Payments Effects

• Host country benefits from initial capital inflow when


MNC establishes business
- Host country records current account debit on repatriated
earnings of MNC
• Host country benefits if FDI substitutes for imports of
goods and services
• Host country benefits when MNC uses its foreign
subsidiary to export to other countries

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8 - 15

Effect on Competition and


Economic Growth

• Greenfield investments increases the amount of


competition, which can:
- Drive down prices
- Increase the economic welfare of consumers
• Increased competition tends to stimulate capital
investments
• Long-term results may include
- Increased productivity growth
- Product and process innovations
- Greater economic growth

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Costs of FDI to Host Countries

• Adverse effects on competition


• Adverse effects on the balance of payments
- After the initial capital inflow there is normally a subsequent
outflow of earnings
- Foreign subsidiaries could import a substantial number of
inputs
• National sovereignty and autonomy
- Some host governments worry that FDI is accompanied by
some loss of economic independence resulting in the host
country’s economy being controlled by a foreign
corporation

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Benefits of FDI to the


Home Country

• Improves balance of payments for inward flow of


foreign earnings
• Creates a demand for exports.
• Export demand can create jobs
• Increased knowledge from operating in a foreign
environment
• Benefits the consumer through lower prices
• Frees up employees and resources for higher value
activities

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Costs of FDI to the


Home Country

• Can drive out local competitors or prevent their


development
• Profits brought home ‘hurt’ (debit) a host’s capital
account
• Parts imported for assembly hurt trade balance
• Can affect sovereignty and national defense

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Home Country Policies and FDI

• To encourage outward • Restricting Outward FDI


FDI - Limit capital outflows
- Government backed out of concern for the
insurance programs to country’s balance of
cover foreign payments
investment risk - Tax incentives to invest
- Capital assistance at home
- Tax incentives - Prohibit national firms
- Political pressure from investing in
certain countries for
political reasons

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8 - 20

Host Country Policies and FDI

• Encouraging Inward FDI • Restricting Inward FDI


- Offer government - Ownership restraints
incentives to foreign firms • Foreign firms are
to invest prohibited to operate in
• Tax concessions certain fields
• Low interest loans • Foreign ownership is
• Grants/subsidies allowed but a significant
proportion of the equity
must be owned by local
investors
- Performance
requirements that control
the behavior of the
MNE’s local subsidiary
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8 - 21

The Nature of Negotiation

• Objective: reach an agreement that benefits both


parties
• In the international context, we must
- understand the influence of norms and value systems
- be sensitive to how these factors influence a company’s
approach to negotiations

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The Negotiation Process

• The negotiation process has been characterized as occurring within


the context of “the four Cs”
- Common interests
- Conflicting interests
- Compromise
- Criteria

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Negotiation and
Bargaining Power

• The outcome of any negotiated agreement depends on


the relative bargaining power of both parties
• Bargaining power depends on three factors
- The value each side places on what the other has to offer
- The number of comparable alternatives available to each
side
- Each party’s time horizon

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8 - 24

Bargaining Power

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Looking Ahead to Chapter 9

• Regional Economic Integration


- Levels of economic integration
- The case for regional integration
- The case against regional integration
- Regional economic Integration in Europe
- Regional economic integration in the Americas
- Regional economic integration elsewhere
- Managerial implications

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