Discussion paper

DP9807 When Does FDI Have Positive Spillovers? Evidence from 17 Transition Market Economies

We use rich firm-level data and national input-output tables from 17 countries over the 2002-2005 period to test new and existing hypotheses about the impact of foreign direct investment (FDI) on the efficiency of domestic firms in the host country (i.e., spillovers). We document that backward linkages have a consistently positive effect on productivity of domestic firms while horizontal and forward linkages show no consistent effect. We also examine how the strength of spillovers varies by sector, FDI source, business environment (corruption, red tape, level of development), firm?s distance to the technological frontier, education of workers, and other firm- and country-specific characteristics.

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Citation

Svejnar, J, K Terrell and Y Gorodnichenko (2014), ‘DP9807 When Does FDI Have Positive Spillovers? Evidence from 17 Transition Market Economies‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 9807. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp9807