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International Business: by Charles W.L. Hill

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At a glance
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The key takeaways are that FDI involves direct investment by firms in foreign countries to produce and market goods abroad. FDI can take the form of greenfield investments (new operations) or acquisitions/mergers with existing foreign firms. Factors driving the growth of FDI include globalization, fewer restrictions, and a desire to circumvent trade barriers.

The different forms of FDI are greenfield investments, which establish wholly new operations, and acquisitions/mergers with existing foreign firms. Most cross-border investment occurs through acquisitions rather than new greenfield projects.

Firms prefer acquisitions over greenfield investments because mergers and acquisitions are quicker to execute, easier to implement, and may involve less risk than building entirely new facilities from scratch. Acquisitions also allow firms to potentially increase efficiency through transferring skills, technology, and capital to the acquired unit.

International Business

9e

By Charles W.L. Hill

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 8

Foreign Direct
Investment
What Is FDI?
 Foreign direct investment (FDI) occurs when a
firm invests directly in new facilities to produce
and/or market in a foreign country
 the firm becomes a multinational enterprise
 FDI can be in the form of
 greenfield investments - the establishment of a wholly
new operation in a foreign country
 acquisitions or mergers with existing firms in the
foreign country
 Most cross-border investment is in the form of
mergers and acquisitions rather than greenfield
investments

8-3
Why Do Firms Choose Acquisition
Versus Greenfield Investments?
 Firms prefer to acquire existing assets
because
mergers and acquisitions are quicker to
execute than greenfield investments
it is easier and perhaps less risky for a firm to
acquire desired assets than build them from
the ground up
firms believe that they can increase the
efficiency of an acquired unit by transferring
capital, technology, or management skills

8-4
What Are The Patterns Of FDI?
 The flow of FDI - the amount of FDI undertaken
over a given time period
outflows of FDI are the flows of FDI out of a
country
inflows of FDI are the flows of FDI into a
country
 The stock of FDI - the total accumulated value of
foreign-owned assets at a given time
 Both the flow and stock of FDI have increased
over the last 30 years

8-5
What Are The Patterns Of FDI?
FDI Outflows 1982-2010 ($ billions)

8-6
What Are The Patterns Of FDI?
FDI Inflows by Region 1995-2010 ($ billion)

8-7
What Are The Patterns Of FDI?
 The growth of FDI is a result of
1. A fear of protectionism
 want to circumvent trade barriers
2. Political and economic changes
 deregulation, privatization, fewer restrictions on
FDI
3. New bilateral investment treaties
 designed to facilitate investment
4. The globalization of the world economy
 many companies now view the world as their
market
 need to be closer to their customers

8-8
What Is The Source Of FDI?
Cumulative FDI Outflows 1998-2010 ($ billions)

8-9
Why Choose FDI?
 Question: Why choose FDI not exporting or licensing?
1. Exporting - producing goods at home and then
shipping them to the receiving country for sale
2. Licensing - granting a foreign entity the right to
produce and sell the firm’s product in return for a
royalty fee on every unit that the foreign entity sells
 internalization theory (aka market imperfections theory)
 Knickerbocker - FDI flows are a reflection of strategic
rivalry between firms in the global marketplace
 multipoint competition
 Vernon - firms undertake FDI at particular stages in the
life cycle of a product

8-10
Why Choose FDI?
 Dunning’s eclectic paradigm - it is
important to consider
location-specific advantages - that arise from
using resource endowments or assets that
are tied to a particular location and that a firm
finds valuable to combine with its own unique
assets
externalities - knowledge spillovers that occur
when companies in the same industry locate
in the same area

8-11
What Are The Theoretical
Approaches To FDI?
 The radical view - the MNE is an instrument of
imperialist domination and a tool for exploiting
host countries to the exclusive benefit of their
capitalist-imperialist home countries
 The free market view - international production
should be distributed among countries according
to the theory of comparative advantage
 Pragmatic nationalism - FDI has both benefits
(inflows of capital, technology, skills and jobs)
and costs (repatriation of profits to the home
country and a negative balance of payments
effect)

8-12
What Does FDI Mean For
The Host Country?
 Benefits of inward FDI for a host country
1. Resource transfer effects
2. Employment effects
3. Balance of payments effects
4. Effects on competition and economic growth
 Costs of inward FDI for a host country
1. Adverse effects on competition within the host
nation
2. Adverse effects on the balance of payments
3. Perceived loss of national sovereignty and
autonomy

8-13
What Does FDI Mean For
The Home Country?
 Benefits of FDI for the home country include
1. The positive effect on the capital account from the
inward flow of foreign earnings
2. The employment effects that arise from outward FDI
3. The gains from learning valuable skills from foreign
markets that can subsequently be transferred back
to the home country
 Costs of FDI for the home country include
1. The negative effect on the balance of payments
2. Employment may also be negatively affected if the
FDI is a substitute for domestic production

8-14
How Does Government
Influence FDI?
 Governments can encourage outward FDI
 government-backed insurance programs to cover
major types of foreign investment risk
 Governments can restrict outward FDI
 limit capital outflows, manipulate tax rules, or outright
prohibit FDI
 Governments can encourage inward FDI
 offer incentives to foreign firms to invest in their
countries
 Governments can restrict inward FDI
 use ownership restraints and performance
requirements

8-15
What Does FDI
Mean For Managers?
 Managers need to consider what trade theory
implies about FDI, and the link between
government policy and FDI
 The direction of FDI can be explained through
the location-specific advantages argument
associated with John Dunning
 A host government’s attitude toward FDI is an
important variable in decisions about where to
locate foreign production facilities and where to
make a foreign direct investment

8-16
What Does FDI
Mean For Managers?
A Decision Framework

8-17

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