Developing economies and international investors. Do investment promotion agencies bring them together?
Working paper

View/ Open
Date
2007Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Discussion Papers [1011]
Abstract
Abstract:
Many countries spend significant resources on investment promotion agencies (IPAs) in the hope of
attracting inflows of foreign direct investment (FDI). Despite the importance of this question for public
policy choices, little is known about the effectiveness of investment promotion efforts. This study
uses newly collected data on national IPAs in 109 countries to examine the effects of investment
promotion on FDI inflows. The empirical analysis follows two approaches. First, we test whether
sectors explicitly targeted by IPAs receive more FDI in the post-targeting period relative to the pretargeting
period and non-targeted sectors. Second, we examine whether the existence of an IPA is
correlated with higher FDI inflows. Results from both approaches point to the same conclusion.
Investment promotion efforts appear to increase FDI inflows to developing countries. Moreover,
agency characteristics, such as its legal status and reporting structure, affect the effectiveness of
investment promotion. There is also evidence of FDI diversion due to investment incentives offered
by other countries in the same geographic region.
Keywords: foreign direct investment, investment promotion, investment incentives