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Capital Flows and Foreign Investment MBAW6 Dermot McAleese FROM TRADE TO CAPITAL MOBILITY Trade Traders need to hold or borrow foreign exchange; trade imbalances need to be financed Better access to credit spurs trade International finance Domestic financial firms are forced to compete Range of financial products expands Innovation Access to foreign capital markets Domestic institutions demand relief form rules; regulation ever harder to enforce Deregulation OUTLINE Trends in capital flows Analysis of capital flows Basic model Capital mobility and taxes Extensions FDI and multinationals Trends in FDI Why invest abroad? Effects of foreign investment Table. 1 Savings, investments and lending, 1993-2000 (% GDP) Investment Developed Countries US EU Japan Developing Countries of which: Africa Asia Middle East & Europe Latin America Net borrowing from rest of world Savings 18.0 19.7 28.0 16.4 20.5 30.1 1.6 -0.8 -2.1 27.8 26.2 1.6 20.1 32.7 22.0 21.5 16.3 32.8 20.6 18.4 3.8 -0.1 1.4 3.1 Source: IMF, World Economic Report (October 1999) Table. 2 Inward and outward stock of foreign-owned capital (US$bn) 1980 1990 1998 European Union Inward Outward 143 153 406 477 1303 1175 United States Inward Outward 83 202 395 435 811 1022 Japan Inward Outward 3 20 10 201 36 310 Latin America and the Caribbean Inward Outward 48 3 116 13 431 45 32 2 146 38 610 329 n/a n/a 14 3 262 23 1 0 2 0.03 14 0.7 East, south and South-East Asia Inward Outward of which China Inward Outward India Inward Outward Source: United Nations, World Investment Report, 1991, 1999 (1999 figures are author’s own estimates) TRENDS IN CAPITAL FLOWS 1990s – ‘the decade of equity finance’ Increased level of integration International bank lending has risen to ½ of GDP in industrial countries Increasing share of government bonds held by foreigners Increasing orientation of the foreign private sector issuers of bonds and securities to the international markets Proliferation of different types of mobile investment funds Demand and supply factors of increasing capital mobility BASIC MODEL Gains form capital mobility Rate of interest (R) A Rs E C R* R* Rn D B MPn MPs On Rate of interest (R) K* K World capital stock (K) On TAXING CAPITAL IN THE CAPITAL-MOBILE WORLD Rate of interest (R) R tax T Sk E T G Ko Capital stock (K) D tax E R Dk O Sk Rate of interest (R) World rate of return F O Dk K1 K0 Capital stock (K) EXTENSIONS Positive effects: capital inflows represent critical part in development of some countries capital inflows create spill-over effect – macro management capital mobility allows risk spreading through portfolio diversification Adverse effects: international capital flows can be very volatile capital inflows can cause unsustainable inflationary pressures capital flows can lead to short term misalignment of the exchange rate capital mobility can weaken country’s tax base by forcing governments to offer excessive enticement to investors FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT Table. 3 Stocks of FDI (% GDP) US UK Japan Germany Netherlands Developing countries Outward 1973 1996 Inward 1973 1996 7.7 9.1 2.5 3.4 25.8 10.4 30.7 5.6 12.4 49.1 1.6 13.9 0.4 3.8 n/a 8.3 20.5 0.7 5.9 30.4 0.6 4.9 5.4 15.6 Source: Computed form J.H. Dunning, The Globalisation of Business (London: Routledge, 1993) and World Investment Report (United Nations, various years) Table. 4 Regional distribution of FDI inflows and outflows (%) Inflows 1995 1998 Outflows 1995 1998 Developed countries of which: US Japan EU Other 63.4 71.5 85.3 91.6 17.9 ~ 35.1 10.4 30.0 0.5 35.7 5.3 25.7 6.3 44.7 8.6 20.5 3.7 59.5 7.9 Developing countries of which: Asia Latin America Developing Europe Other 32.3 25.8 14.5 8.1 20.7 10.0 0.1 1.5 13.2 11.1 0.2 1.3 12.3 2.1 ~ 0.1 5.6 2.4 ~ 0.1 4.3 2.7 0.2 0.3 100 100 100 100 Rest of world Total Source: UNCTAD, World Investment Report (1999). WHY INVEST ABROAD? - OLI PARADIGM Ownership advantages Intangible assets Economies of size Location advantages Labour costs and other inputs Availability of skilled labour Market size, growth of market Government Other costs Internalisation advantages ’Failure’ in markets for final goods and inputs Monopoly power Product differentiation EFFECTS OF FOREIGN INVESTMENT Multinationals generate externalities Multinationals create more jobs Foreign investment generates tax revenues Foreign investment generates foreign exchange TO MAXIMISE SPILLOVERS HOST COUNTRY NEEDS TO DEVELOP: An integrated policy approach Targeted incentives After-care policies Support for indigenous industry