Public Policies and FDI Location: Differences Between Developing and Developed Countries
Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
2010
Abstract
Host country government officials in developing and developed countries alike would like to know the impact of their public policies on foreign investment in their countries. Unfortunately, the literature does not provide a single view, and there are likely to be differences between developing and developed countries. This paper examines the impact of three host country government policies on the host’s FDI stock: taxation, good governance, and infrastructure. We focus on whether the impact of these factors on FDI differs depending on the level of development of the host country. The regression results indicate that FDI is sensitive to host country taxation in developed countries, but not in developing countries; FDI is sensitive to host country governance measures and corruption in developing countries but not developed; and FDI shows sensitivity to host country infrastructure quality in both developed and developing host countries.
Recommended Citation
Goodspeed, Timothy; Martinez-Vazquez, Jorge; and Zhang, Li, "Public Policies and FDI Location: Differences Between Developing and Developed Countries" (2010). ICEPP Working Papers. 105.
https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/icepp/105
Comments
International Center for Public Policy Working Paper Series #1001. Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University.