International Business: by Charles W.L. Hill
International Business: by Charles W.L. Hill
10E
• Vernon - firms undertake FDI at particular stages in the life cycle of a product
WHY CHOOSE FDI?
• Dunning’s eclectic paradigm - it is important to consider
• Ownership advantages - include proprietary information and various ownership rights of
a company. These may consist of, branding, copyright, trademark or patent rights, plus
the use and management of internally-available skills. Ownership advantages are
typically considered to be intangible.
• location-specific advantages - that arise from using resource endowments or assets that
are tied to a particular location and that a firm finds valuable to combine with its own
unique assets
• externalities - knowledge spillovers that occur when companies in the same industry
locate in the same area
THE THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO FDI
• The radical view - the MNE is an instrument of imperialist
domination and a tool for exploiting host countries to the
exclusive benefit of their capitalist-imperialist home countries
• The free market view - international production should be
distributed among countries according to the theory of
comparative advantage
• Pragmatic nationalism - FDI has both benefits (inflows of
capital, technology, skills and jobs) and costs (repatriation of
profits to the home country and a negative balance of payments
effect)
WHAT DOES FDI MEAN FOR
THE HOST COUNTRY?
• Benefits of inward FDI for a host country
1. Resource transfer effects
2. Employment effects
3. Balance of payments effects
4. Effects on competition and economic growth
• Costs of inward FDI for a host country
1. Adverse effects on competition within the host nation
2. Adverse effects on the balance of payments
3. Perceived loss of national sovereignty and autonomy
WHAT DOES FDI MEAN FOR
THE HOME COUNTRY?
• Benefits of FDI for the home country include
1. The positive effect on the capital account from the inward flow of
foreign earnings
2. The employment effects that arise from outward FDI
3. The gains from learning valuable skills from foreign markets that can
subsequently be transferred back to the home country
• Costs of FDI for the home country include
1. The negative effect on the balance of payments
2. Employment may also be negatively affected if the FDI is a substitute
for domestic production
HOW DOES GOVERNMENT
INFLUENCE FDI?
• Governments can encourage outward FDI
• government-backed insurance programs to cover major types of foreign
investment risk
• Governments can restrict outward FDI
• limit capital outflows, manipulate tax rules, or outright prohibit FDI
• Governments can encourage inward FDI
• offer incentives to foreign firms to invest in their countries
• Governments can restrict inward FDI
• use ownership restraints and performance requirements
WHAT DOES FDI
MEAN FOR MANAGERS?
A Decision Framework