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Does "good government" draw foreign capital?

Does "good government" draw foreign capital?2007

Joseph P. H. Fan

About this book

China is now the world's largest destination of FDI, despite assessments highlighting its institutional deficiencies. But this FDI inflow corresponds closely to predicted FDI flows into China from a model that predicts FDI inflow based on government quality indicators and controls and is estimated across a sample of other weak-institution countries. The only real discrepancy is that, if government quality is measured by constraints on executive power, China receives somewhat more FDI than the model predicts. This might reflect an underestimation of the strength of these constraints in China, a unique institutional setting for FDI operations, FDI based on expected future institutional improvements, or a unique Chinese model of development. We conclude that Ockham's razor disfavors the last. We also note that FDI may be elevated because Chinese institutions protected foreign firms better than domestic ones.

Details

First published
2007
OL Work ID
OL37014673W

Subjects

Foreign InvestmentsCapital investments

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.