The Effects of Financial Development on Foreign Direct Investment
Keywords
NATURAL RESOURCESINCOME
CREDITORS
DUMMY VARIABLES
DOMESTIC FIRMS
GDP
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
MARKET SIZE
SOURCE OF FUNDS
PRIVATE CREDIT
EXPORTS
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY
LOAN
INSTRUMENT
COUNTRY DUMMY
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES
CREDIT BUREAU
MERGERS
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
ENTREPRENEUR
FOREIGN ASSETS
FACE VALUE
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FINANCING NEEDS
UNDERDEVELOPED COUNTRIES
ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
EQUITY STAKE
FIXED COSTS
EXTERNAL INVESTORS
FINANCIAL NEEDS
SOURCES OF FUNDS
INTANGIBLE
ACCOUNTING
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
TAX
PUBLIC CREDIT
MORAL HAZARD
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
MARKETS DATABASE
MANUFACTURING SECTOR
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
RIGHTS OF CREDITORS
BORROWING
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
OUTPUT
FIXED ASSETS
BANKING CRISES
CAPITAL STRUCTURE
CHECKS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
DOMESTIC BANKING
INFORMATION SHARING
DUMMY VARIABLE
FINANCIAL ADVANTAGE
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
ADVERSE SELECTION
DEBT
STOCK MARKET
STOCKS
FOREIGN BANKS
NEW MARKETS
HOST COUNTRY
BILATERAL TRADE
NPL
FOREIGN MARKETS
INFORMATIONAL ASYMMETRIES
ASSETS RATIO
FDI
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
CAPITAL MARKETS
LIBERALIZATION
EQUITY INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC INVESTORS
LEGAL RIGHTS
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
TANGIBLE ASSETS
LOCAL MARKET
INCOME GROUPS
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY
CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
FINANCIAL SYSTEMS
CAPITAL STOCK
CREDIT INFORMATION
REPUDIATION
DOMESTIC CREDIT
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP RESTRICTIONS
EXTERNAL DEBT
BANKRUPTCY
LENDER
ECONOMETRIC MODELS
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
EXTERNAL FUNDS
HOST COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES
DOMESTIC BANK
EXTERNAL FINANCING
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERS
GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES
MANUFACTURING SECTORS
JURISDICTION
BROAD ACCESS
STOCK MARKET CAPITALIZATION
CREDITOR RIGHTS
EARNINGS
FINANCIAL SERVICES
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PRIVATE CREDIT BUREAU
EXPENDITURES
EQUITY FINANCING
BENEFICIARY
HOME COUNTRY
WORLD INVESTMENT REPORT
CREDIT REGISTRY
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS
LENDERS
ACCESS TO DEBT FINANCING
CASH FLOWS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
FOREIGN FIRMS
INTERNAL FINANCE
DATA AVAILABILITY
MOVABLE ASSETS
PREFERENTIAL ACCESS
CAPITAL CONTROLS
VARIABLE COSTS
PRIVATE SECTOR
INTERNATIONAL TRANSACTIONS
SELF-FINANCE
BANKS
EQUIPMENT
EXTERNAL BORROWING
FOREIGN AFFILIATE
HUMAN CAPITAL
BANKING SYSTEM
SEIZURE OF ASSETS
TRANSACTION
BANKING CRISIS
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
GDP PER CAPITA
MULTINATIONAL
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS
ACCESS TO EXTERNAL FINANCE
INTEREST PAYMENTS
SUPPLY CHAIN
BANKRUPTCY LAWS
CORRUPTION
DAY TRADING
WAGES
SMALL FIRMS
FUNDING SOURCES
ACCESSIBILITY
FOREIGN INVESTOR
FOREIGN LENDER
FOREIGN MARKET
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FOREIGN PRODUCERS
TRADING
CAPITAL INTENSITY
OUTSOURCING
HOLDING
GROUP OF FIRMS
INITIAL INVESTMENT
FINANCING OBSTACLES
MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES
MNE
EXTERNALITIES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
FOREIGN AFFILIATES
CREDITOR
INTERNAL FUNDS
MARKET CAP
RISK OF EXPROPRIATION
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
LABOUR MARKET
EXTERNAL CAPITAL
COLLATERAL
CROSS-BORDER TRANSACTIONS
MNES
SEIZURE
VALUE ADDED
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20515Abstract
This paper examines how financial development influences foreign direct investment. The direct and indirect sector-specific effects that source countries' financial development and destination countries' financial development can have on foreign direct investment are first identified in a conceptual framework. The presence and relative strength of these various channels of influence at the different margins of foreign direct investment are then empirically investigated using unique and underexploited sector-specific bilateral panel data on greenfield foreign direct investment over the period 2003-2006. Causality is established by applying a difference-in-differences approach that exploits the variation in financial vulnerability across manufacturing sectors. The overall effects of higher source countries' financial development and destination countries' financial development on the relative volume of bilateral foreign direct investment in financially vulnerable sectors are large, positive, and complementary. These effects appear to operate mainly at the intensive margin rather than at the extensive margin of foreign direct investment. There is also evidence of direct and indirect effects of financial development. The key findings are robust to the use of data on the number of bilateral Mergers\&Acquisitions transactions. Overall, the empirical results unambiguously indicate that a sophisticated and well-functioning financial system in source and destination countries greatly facilitates the international expansion of firms through foreign direct investment, especially in financially vulnerable sectors.Date
2014-11-12Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/20515http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20515
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Collections
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