FDI promotion through bilateral investment treaties: more than a bit?

Policy makers in developing countries have increasingly pinned their hopes on bilateral investment treaties (BITs) in order to improve their chances in the worldwide competition for foreign direct investment (FDI). However, the effectiveness of BITs in inducing higher FDI inflows is still open to de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review of world economics 2010-04, Vol.146 (1), p.147-177
Hauptverfasser: Busse, Matthias, Königer, Jens, Nunnenkamp, Peter
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Königer, Jens
Nunnenkamp, Peter
description Policy makers in developing countries have increasingly pinned their hopes on bilateral investment treaties (BITs) in order to improve their chances in the worldwide competition for foreign direct investment (FDI). However, the effectiveness of BITs in inducing higher FDI inflows is still open to debate. It is in several ways that we attempt to clarify the inconclusive empirical findings of earlier studies. We cover a much larger sample of host and source countries by drawing on an extensive data set on bilateral FDI flows. Furthermore, we account for unilateral FDI liberalization, in order not to overestimate the effect of BITs, as well as for the potential endogeneity of BITs. Employing a gravity-type model and various model specifications, including an instrumental variable approach, we find that BITs do promote FDI flows to developing countries. BITs may even substitute for weak domestic institutions, though probably not for unilateral capital account liberalization.
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subjects Bilateral economic relations
Bilateral investment treaties
Bilateralism
Capital account
Competition
Developing countries
Economic Policy
Economic theory
Economics
Economics and Finance
European Integration
Foreign direct investment
Foreign direct investments
Foreign investment
Global economy
Gross domestic product
Host country
International Economics
Investors
LDCs
Liberalization
Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics
Multinational enterprises
Original Paper
Probability
Remittances
Repatriation
Trade liberalization
Treaties
Unilateralism
title FDI promotion through bilateral investment treaties: more than a bit?
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