ECONOMIC development, FOREIGN investments, MARKET entry, INTERNATIONAL trade, ECONOMIC competition, EXPORTS, BUSINESS models
Abstract
Using a North- South model of heterogeneous firms, the paper investigates the effects of the financial development of the South on the choice of international entry mode (export vs foreign direct investment [ FDI]) of Northern firms. Such development facilitates the entry of local firms and thus intensifies product market competition. As a result, the intensive margins, extensive margins and total sales from export or FDI of Northern firms are all reduced. The paper provides conditions that determine whether export or FDI is affected more significantly. The results generate empirically testable hypotheses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Haraguchi, Nobuya, Martorano, Bruno, Sanfilippo, Marco, and Shingal, Anirudh
Subjects
DEVELOPING countries, FOREIGN investments, ECONOMIC development, INTERNATIONAL trade, HUMAN capital
Abstract
This paper investigates the factors driving manufacturing growth accelerations in a sample of 134 developing countries over the period 1970 to 2014. We first identify growth acceleration episodes of manufacturing value added (MVA) by their year of initiation and according to a country's income classification. We then estimate a probit model to explain what factors predict these MVA growth accelerations. Our results show that human capital and institutions represent contextual factors that favor the growth of manufacturing, together with macroeconomic policies related to investment, and openness to foreign trade and capital. We also find that most of these factors not only foster episodic accelerations of industry, but they contribute as well to a sustained process of industrialization that characterized the process of economic growth of a few successful countries over the period 1970 to 2014. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ECONOMIC development, INTERNATIONAL trade, FOREIGN investments, GROWTH rate, PREDICTION models, PANEL analysis, DEVELOPING countries
Abstract
This paper investigates empirically the relationship between two channels of external openness: international trade, foreign direct investment (FDI), and the rate of economic growth implied by the leader-follower model. The predictions of the theory are tested for the group of 97 developing countries in the period of 1974-2006 using static and dynamic panel data estimation methods. The estimation results show that both international trade and FDI positively contribute to growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]