FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™
Dear Reader,

Registration with the Sri Lanka FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️ would enable you to enjoy an array of other services such as Member Rankings, User Groups, Own Posts & Profile, Exclusive Research, Live Chat Box etc..

All information contained in this forum is subject to Disclaimer Notice published.


Thank You
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️
www.srilankachronicle.com


Join the forum, it's quick and easy

FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™
Dear Reader,

Registration with the Sri Lanka FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️ would enable you to enjoy an array of other services such as Member Rankings, User Groups, Own Posts & Profile, Exclusive Research, Live Chat Box etc..

All information contained in this forum is subject to Disclaimer Notice published.


Thank You
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️
www.srilankachronicle.com
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™

Encyclopedia of Latest news, reviews, discussions and analysis of stock market and investment opportunities in Sri Lanka

Click Link to get instant AI answers to all business queries.
Click Link to find latest Economic Outlook of Sri Lanka
Click Link to view latest Research and Analysis of the key Sectors and Industries of Sri Lanka
Worried about Paying Taxes? Click Link to find answers to all your Tax related matters
Do you have a legal issues? Find instant answers to all Sri Lanka Legal queries. Click Link
Latest images

Latest topics

» Stocks on the Radar at CSE
by Rare Yesterday at 2:13 pm

» Global Rice prices drops
by Rare Thu Oct 03, 2024 1:07 pm

» Post-election winners.
by Rare Thu Oct 03, 2024 1:01 pm

» Construction Giant's IPO - Access Engineering
by shiraz latiff Thu Oct 03, 2024 12:43 pm

» ACCESS Engineering,my target Rs. 26/-
by shiraz latiff Thu Oct 03, 2024 12:41 pm

» Access Engineering awarded two more contract packages at Colombo Port
by shiraz latiff Thu Oct 03, 2024 12:39 pm

» Asha Securities and Asia Securities Target AEL (Access Enginnering PLC )
by nilantha suranga Thu Oct 03, 2024 12:36 pm

» ACCESS ENGINEERING PLC (AEL) Will pass IPO Price of Rs 25 ?????
by Anushka Perz Wed Oct 02, 2024 10:33 am

» History Repeat Access Engineering PLC
by sakuni Wed Oct 02, 2024 10:31 am

» Asian stocks drift higher amid rate cut speculation; Japan lags
by Rare Mon Sep 30, 2024 1:29 pm

» Sri Lanka: Light Rail Transport (LRT) at what opportunity cost?
by God Father Mon Sep 30, 2024 7:52 am

» Sri Lankan companies with small market cap
by Rare Sat Sep 28, 2024 4:41 am

» Large cap Sri Lankan companies
by Rare Sat Sep 28, 2024 4:36 am

» Gold, copper, iron and aluminum no more bargain
by Rare Sat Sep 28, 2024 4:25 am

» Reinstatement of SLT-Mobitel's ETA System for Streamlined Visa Processing
by pramu perera Fri Sep 27, 2024 8:49 pm

» Oil prices fall further
by Rare Fri Sep 27, 2024 12:20 pm

» Sri Lanka rupee closes at 275/290 to the US dollar
by Rare Thu Sep 26, 2024 11:58 am

» Bullish about a sustainable turnaround - CSE Chairman
by Rare Wed Sep 25, 2024 1:51 pm

» Can NPP secure majority in Parliament?
by God Father Wed Sep 25, 2024 9:41 am

» Growing superstar LVEF 14+
by ddrperera Wed Sep 25, 2024 8:53 am

» Why Central Bank Governor Nandalal Weerasinghe should Resign?
by God Father Tue Sep 24, 2024 2:22 pm

» Can AKD win the upcoming Parliamentary Election ???
by pramu perera Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:46 pm

» Colombo Stock Market: Where are we heading?
by Rare Fri Sep 20, 2024 12:40 pm

LISTED COMPANIES

Submit Post
ශ්‍රී ලංකා මූල්‍ය වංශකථාව - සිංහල
Submit Post


CONATCT US


Send your suggestions and comments

* - required fields

Read FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ Disclaimer



EXPERT CHRONICLE™

ECONOMIC CHRONICLE

GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP)



CHRONICLE™ YouTube


You are not connected. Please login or register

Attracting quality foreign direct investment in developing countries

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

target1


Manager - Equity Analytics
Manager - Equity Analytics

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in developing countries has a bad reputation. In some discussions, it is presented as tantamount to postcolonial exploitation of raw materials and cheap labour. However, recent data shows that FDI in developing countries increasingly flows to medium and high-skilled manufacturing sectors, involving elevated income levels (Figure 1). What’s more, many emerging economies have built their growth on FDI flows.

Quality FDI

The trick is to attract “quality FDI” that links foreign investors into the local host country economy.

Quality FDI is characterised as:

contributing to the creation of decent and value-adding jobs;
enhancing the skill base of host economies;
facilitating the transfer of technology, knowledge and know-how;
boosting competitiveness of domestic firms and enabling their access to markets; and
operating in a socially and environmentally responsible manner.
To achieve this, host countries cannot just wait and see what international market forces may bring to them. Rather, they need tailored policies to overcome domestic imperfections that hinder the smooth integration of indigenous and foreign firms into world-wide supply-chain networks.

Recent research offers evidence for strategies in developing countries that successfully turned FDI into quality FDI. The idea underlying the following suggestions is to learn the lessons from experience (Moran et al., 2016).

Figure 1: Manufacturing FDI flows to developing countries


Source: UNCTAD 2014
Strategies for attracting quality FDI

Open markets and allow for FDI inflows. Reduce restrictions on FDI. Provide open, transparent and dependable conditions for all kinds of firms, whether foreign or domestic, including: ease of doing business, access to imports, relatively flexible labour markets and protection of intellectual property rights.
Set up an Investment Promotion Agency (IPA). A successful IPA could target suitable foreign investors and could then become the link between them and the domestic economy. On the one side, it should act as a one-stop shop for the requirements investors demand from the host country. On the other side, it should act as a catalyst in the host’s domestic economy, prompting it to provide top notch infrastructure and ready access to skilled workers, technicians, engineers and managers that may be required to attract such investors (Moran, 2014; Barnes et al., 2015; Harding and Javorcig, 2012).Moreover, it should engage in after-investment care, acknowledging the demonstration effects from satisfied investors, the potential for reinvestments, and the potential for cluster-development because of follow-up investments.
Think carefully about sectors/activities to be targeted. Investment and location decisions of suppliers may be dependent on those of prime multinational investors in the host economy (McKinsey, 2001; Javorcik et al., 2006).
Put up the infrastructure required for a quality investor: such as sufficient close-by transport facilities (airport, ports), adequate and reliable supply of energy, provision of an adequately skilled workforce, facilities for the vocational training of specialised workers, ideally designed in cooperation with the investor (Ibid.).
Strengthen backward linkages from FDI into the indigenous economy. Allow for the competitive pressure of foreign entrants on their local suppliers to raise competitiveness of the latter (Rhee et al., 1990), and allow for multiple forms of direct assistance from foreign to domestic firms, in the form of training, help with setting up production lines, management coaching regarding strategy and financial planning, financing, assistance with quality control and introduction to export markets (Javorcik and Spatareanu, 2005; Blalock and Gertler, 2008; Godart and Görg, 2013; Görg and Seric, 2016).
Encourage spillovers from FDI into the indigenous economy. Local firms set up by managers who had started in multinational firms are more successful and more productive than others (Görg and Strobl, 2005). Managers of local firms gain knowledge of new technologies and marketing techniques by studying and imitating their multinational competitors (Javorcic and Spatareanu, 2005; Boly et al., 2015). Similarly, worker movements from multinational to local firms spread knowledge and skills.
Encourage first-time foreign direct investors. Foreign firms that are not already part of an extensive network of subsidiaries are readier to accept linkages to domestic suppliers (Amendolagine et al., 2015).
Encourage foreign direct investors from diaspora members. These are also more likely to generate linkages to domestic firms and contribute to the internationalisation of the host country (Boly et al., 2014).
Provide access to credit by reforming domestic financial markets. Setting-up a business-friendly financial system helps indigenous firms to respond to challenges and impulses from foreign entrants, to self-select into supplier status, and to thereby grow and prosper (Alfaro et al., 2009).
Set up a vendor development programme to support the match making process between foreign customer and local supplier. To strengthen the capacity of the domestic economy, it may offer financing opportunities to indigenous suppliers for required investment on the basis of purchase contracts from foreign buyers (see the Local Industry Upgrading Program (LIUP) of Singapore), or reimburse the salary of a manager in a foreign plant acting as a talent scout among domestic suppliers (see the example of the Singapore’s Economic Development Board).
Shape Export Processing Zones (EPZs) in a way that they spearhead into the domestic economy. Avoid EPZ regulations discriminating against the creation of local supplier relationships. Set up a secondary industrial zone for local suppliers, be it as a geographical site adjacent to formal export processing zones, or be it as a legal status allowing for easy foreign-domestic linkages with, for example, databanks and “marriage counselors”, to assist in supplier selection (Moran et al., 2016).
Refocus the “Who Is Us?” perspective and address related concerns adequately. “Us” should be understood as the firms that are most beneficial to the domestic economy irrespective of the nationality of their owners. Therefore, the firms that create the highest-skilled and highest-paying jobs, the least-expensive products, and the most competitive exports are considered “Us” (Reich, 1990).
Be patient and rely on the gradual structural transformation of the domestic economy. Investors may come in waves. For example, first, investors in thermionic tubes, valves and transistors, then, in television and broadcasting systems, and finally, in computers, computer peripherals, and data processing systems. Along such avenues, FDI may contribute to diversifying and upgrading domestic production (Amendolagine et al., 2013; Moran, 2014; Barnes et al., 2015).
Notes of caution

Do not insist that all inward FDI be at the most sophisticated technical level. International firms with middle-level technology can provide benefits and connect up with local suppliers whose capabilities match the foreign firms more closely (Boly et al., 2015; Pérez-Villar and Seric, 2015).
Do not confound supply-chain creation with support for SMEs. Medium-sized and larger indigenous companies are often more apt to link with foreign investors in win-win scenarios than their smaller counterparts (UNCTAD, 2011).
Do not subsidise specific companies. Public support should take the more general form of creating reliable infrastructure and offering specific vocational training.
The role of external donors and developed countries

There is still a vital role for external donors such as developed countries and multilateral financial institutions in supporting developing countries. The explosion of international private sector investment flows has not eliminated the need to support growth-and-development programmes in developing countries, even beyond emergency aid and pure poverty reduction programmes.
Developed countries should improve the functioning of financial markets worldwide, to enable developing countries to harness their FDI. For instance, better financial market institutions, even in FDI source countries, help overcoming deficient financial markets in host countries, thus increasing FDI flows to developing countries (Görg and Kersting; forthcoming, Donaubauer et al.; 2016).
Developed countries should intensify support for effective FDI promotion of developing countries. Targeting large investors pro-actively in particular sectors requires specific and expensive expertise on the side of the IPAs, with a professional staff to be paid at internationally competitive salaries, the costs of which could be borne by external donors. Moreover, developing countries need help in learning how to use IPAs effectively for marketing their countries to multinational investors.
Conclusion

The essence of the suggestions is to advocate a light form of industrial policy: a policy that seeks to hitch FDI to development goals and to generate backward linkages as deep as possible into the host economy. The evidence cited here shows that progress in developing countries can be achieved without either substantial levels of protection or large amounts of direct support, through focusing on Quality FDI.

https://www.theigc.org/blog/attracting-quality-foreign-direct-investment-developing-countries/

Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum