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Investment Global Investment Foreign Direct Investment MNCs Overview When should firms undertake global investment? What are the 2 principal types of global investment? What are the 2 main types of FDI? Which do host governments prefer? Which do firms prefer? What is most distinctive about the pattern of global investment between countries? Is there such a thing as a global corporation? What are the primary benefits for host countries from FDI? What are the costs? Need to know Understand Principal types of global investment Pattern of Foreign Direct Investment that occurs between countries Why firms undertake FDI and become multinational in their operations rather than simply exporting products or licensing their know-how. FDI Explanations Economists assume domestic firms have a local advantage. FDI is profitable only if: Industrial organization. Overseas firms bring some kind of technological or managerial superiority. Cost of capital. They obtain their financing more cheaply. FDI Explanations The industrial organization model for FDI focuses on ownership advantages: Patents, Trademarks, Management techniques Locational advantages such as resource availability. Key Terms The flow of FDI refers to the amount of FDI undertaken over a given time period The stock of FDI refers to the total accumulated value of foreign owned assts at a given time The outflows of FDI refer to the flow of FDI out of a country The inflows of FDI refers to the flow of FDI into a country Growth Environment Reasons for recent FDI growth Rapid economic growth in emerging markets. Significant improvements in global transportation and communications technology Liberal policy changes ending capital controls and promoting privatization and deregulation in home & host countries Market economies emerge in former Soviet bloc LUK/Pepsi Crisis? Global Investment 2 types Portfolio, Direct Foreign Direct Investment Tangible assets such as factories, capital goods, or land. Traditionally in manufacturing or resource extraction. Recent shift towards services. Patient capital LUK/ Bolivia Global Investment Portfolio Investment An investment that does not generate any managerial voice. Takes place primarily through financial institutions: banks or investment funds. Examples include bonds or equities insufficient in magnitude to give the investor a say in management. Volatile, or “hot” money. FDI (IMF Definition) “An investment to acquire a lasting interest in an enterprise operating in an economy other than that of the investor, the investor’s purpose being to have an effective voice in the management of the enterprise.” 2 Types of FDI Greenfield: Acquisition: Creation from the ground-up of an economic asset or other productive asset. (Mercedes in Alabama) Brownfield in Russia Purchase by foreigners of an existing asset. (Leucadia/Argentina) Which do governments prefer? Net economic value of takeovers only positive if new owners make more productive use of existing asset Rationale for privatization Types of FDI Another View Horizontal Direct Investment FDI in the same industry abroad as company operates at home. DHL buys Airborne . Vertical FDI takes two forms Backward vertical: FDI is an investment in an industry abroad that provides inputs for a firm’s domestic production processes Exxon buys exploration services company. Forward vertical: FDI occurs when an industry abroad sells the outputs of a firm’s domestic production processes. PDeVsa buys gas stations Acquisitions vs. Greenfield Most FDI is in acquisitions Quicker to execute Valuable strategic assets Synergies or increased efficiency with acquired firm Fewer start-up risks FDI Flows Historically, most FDI has been directed at the developed nations of the world as firms based in advanced countries invested in other developed country markets The US has been the favorite target for FDI inflows. Why? FDI Flows While developed nations still account for the largest share of FDI inflows, FDI into some developing nations has increased Most recent inflows into developing nations have been targeted at the largest emerging economies. China, India, Brazil. Services More FDI in services Services? The shift to services is being driven by four factors Many developed economies have shifted away from manufacturing and toward service industries Services are hard to trade internationally Many countries have liberalized their regimes governing FDI in services The rise of Internet-based global telecommunications networks. Has allowed some service enterprises to relocate some of their value creation activities to different nations to take advantage of favorable factor costs. Call centers, accounting FDI & Risk Why not export? Or, license? FDI expensive and risky compared to exporting or licensing. Capital costs of new facilities. Political and country risk of different business and social environment. Luk Investment Committee/Colorado Risk Moscow/Hurdle Rate Global operations means multiple political, economic, legal, social, & cultural environments Home and host country economic policies, legal & regulatory environments. Widely diverging economic parameters: income, age, urbanization etc. Business philosophy, patterns of ownership and management training. Social, cultural, linguistic patterns can vary Incentives Summary Why invest overseas? Allows firms to increase their profitability and rate of growth in ways not available to purely domestic enterprises. May be required to match overseas rivals Incentives Firms that operate internationally are able to Expand the market for their domestic products Realize location economies by dispersing individual value creation activities Realize greater cost economies Earn a greater return by leveraging any valuable skills developed in foreign operations Expanding The Market A company can increase its growth rate by taking goods or services developed at home and selling them internationally Increases sales Allows for greater economies of scale Returns from such a strategy are likely to be greater if indigenous competitors in the nations a company enters lack comparable products P & G 1930s-1990s Expanding the Market Global market expansion often rests upon the core competencies that underlie the development, production, and marketing of goods or services Core competencies are skills within the firm that competitors cannot easily match or imitate Toyota in auto production and logistics. Proctor & Gamble in consumer products. Location Economics Firms benefit from locating value creating activities in optimal locations Countries differ across a range of dimensions. Economic, legal, educational, cultural Factor costs Allows for reducing the costs of value creation activities or enhancing product differentiation capabilities Global Supply Chain Configuration of value-adding activity Applied location economics The pattern or geographic arrangement of locations where the firm carries out value-chain activities. Locates firm’s sourcing, manufacturing, and distribution locations worldwide. Global Supply Chain Allows the firm can concentrate these activities in countries where it can maximize its competitive advantages. Firms configure these activities to save money, reduce delivery time, access factors of production, and extract advantages relative to competitors. Legal Treatment Two basic types of non-discriminatory treatment cover foreign investment. Derive from custom, judicial decisions, and treaty law. National Treatment: Treatment no less favorable accorded by host government to its own nationals and companies under similar circumstances. MFN: Treatment no less favorable than that accorded nationals and companies of 3rd countries under like circumstances. Investors want National Treatment. Usually get MFN at best. FDI More Intrusive Portfolio investment is driven more by differing rates of return among national economies FDI sector specific Competitive advantage over local firms Longer term, more integrative local presence. More controversial politically Investment Issues MNCs Host Countries Protection against expropriation. Performance requirements Equal treatment Transparency Add jobs, capital, new technology from FDI Develop and protect domestic industry Performance requirements NGOs Environment, labor standards, human rights Multinational Corporations A company that… Engages in foreign production through its affiliates located in several countries, controls the policies of its affiliates, and implements production, marketing, and finance strategies that transcend national boundaries. Aims to secure least cost production facilities for world markets. More than an exporter or foreign manufacturer or licenser. Orientation Home-country oriented (multi-domestic) Host-country oriented (transnational) World oriented (global) MNCs Agents of Globalization Cohen: Prime agents of globalization Distributes goods and services across national borders Establishes production facilities and integrates production on a global scale. Spreads ideas, tastes, and technology. Still, MNCs and FDI highly concentrated and distributed very unevenly around the world Transnational Management New corporate structures have emerged to exploit new investment opportunities. Per UN now 64,000 international companies and 870,000 subsidiaries 60% of world trade is within MNCs. Many have global brands, R&D, and regional profit centers MNCs are increasingly being managed on regional, if not global lines. Europe, North America, E. Asia MNCs & Trade Foreign production of US MNCs 4x exports by 1970. Many US firms have more than ½ their assets abroad and derive more than ½ their earnings from overseas. Intra-firm trade—transactions between subsidiaries of the same firm. Huge proportion of world trade 1/3 US exports 2/5 US imports ½ all trade between US and Japan. Who is “us”? How do you determine the “home country” of a multinational? Toyota is headquartered in Japan, but directly employs 34,000 North Americans, not to mention 150,000 supplier and dealer employees and has contributed nearly $200 million to US charities since 1991 GlaxoSmithkline, the large pharmaceutical, is headquartered in the UK, but operations are based out of the US. R&D takes place at 20 sites in eight countries, including Spain. What companies should a state support? Who is a US MNC? Who is a UK MNC? Where is Home? A company tends to locate its highest valueadded operations in the country it considers “home.” Research and Development Manufacturing of the most sensitive components But today’s MNCs have extensive R&D facilities abroad. Is Toyota “us”? Resource Transfer Effects FDI can make a positive contribution to a host economy by supplying Capital Technology Management Jobs Host Country Benefits of FDI 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 Host Country Benefits 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 Host Country Costs Adverse effects on competition. Local firms lose out. 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 MNCs and Home Countries Support of State in efforts abroad Government backed risk insurance. (OPIC) Government loans. (Ex-Im Bank) Eliminate double taxation. Political persuasion to relax restrictions on inbound FDI. (Treasury) Support of enterprise needs in multinational negotiations Multilateral Agreement on Investment, e.g. US-China WTO agreement State efforts to limit unfair competition at home Limit capital outflows for foreign investors. Non-tariff barriers: Anti-dumping/ Countervailing duty laws Subsidies (EU’s CAP and US Farm Bill, e.g.) Regulatory systems to avoid competition Japan’s Large Store Law prevented Toys R Us or other large stores from investing MNCs and Host Countries State promotion of inward investment Offer incentives State constraints on inward investment Tax concessions Low-interest loans Grant/subsidies Attempt to attract investment away from other countries States and regions within countries Create strong infrastructure and economic environment Ex. Costa Rica’s governmentfostered infrastructure and economic strength led Intel to recently build a 5,000 employee chip manufacturing plant. Ownership restraints. Performance requirements Excluded from specific areas National security. Competition. Restrictions on ownership %. Local content. Technology transfer. Local participation in management Politically motivated efforts to legislate labor conditions and environmental requirements Territorial tax jurisdictions Pragmatic Nationalists Most nations are pragmatic. Generally, resource transfers benefit and strengthen the host country All countries impose some restrictions on FDI Allow FDI if benefits outweigh costs Block FDI that harms indigenous industry Court FDI that is in national interest Tax breaks Subsidies