YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
IS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT PRODUCTIVE Miguel D. Ramirez May 2007 This paper analyzes the theoretical and empirical links between key
economic variables such as foreign direct investment (FDI) and private investment spending
in Latin America during the 1980-2001 period. The pooled model for nine major Latin
American countries tests the complementarity hypothesis which suggests that a ceteris
paribus increase in FDI raises the marginal productivity of private capital by
increasing the pool of available resources and enhancing the transfer of more advanced
technology and better managerial practices. The paper also addresses the issue of whether
changes in the real exchange rate (expenditure-switching policies) have a deflationary
effect on the economies of Latin America. To test the hypothesis put forth by the critics
of FDI that it diverts resources away from financing capital formation, the paper
generates a "net" variable for FDI flows by deducting the repatriation of
profits and dividends from the gross FDI inflows. In general, the findings suggest that
(lagged) gross FDI, public investment spending, and real credit to the private sector have
a positive and significant effect on private capital formation, while lagged changes in
the real exchange rate, particularly its volatility, as measured by th period standard
deviation, have a negative effect. In the case of the net FDI variable, it remains
significant but its impact is reduced by more than half when the repatriation of profits
and dividends is taken into account. The aforementioned estimates are obtained via the
application of recently developed panel unit root and panel (Pedroni) cointegration tests
on the included variables in the pooled investment function. |