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FDI spillovers in an emerging market: the role of foreign firms' country origin diversity and domestic firms' absorptive capacity

464

Citations

67

References

2010

Year

TLDR

Prior research on FDI spillovers has focused on how FDI presence affects domestic firm productivity. This study examines how the diversity of FDI country origins influences domestic firm productivity. The authors argue that diverse FDI origins broaden the range of technologies and management practices available to domestic firms, and test this using panel data from Chinese manufacturing firms (1998–2003). They find that greater diversity of FDI country origins is positively associated with domestic firm productivity, particularly for larger firms and when the technology gap is moderate. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Abstract

Abstract Prior literature on foreign direct investment (FDI) spillovers has mainly focused on how the presence of FDI affects the productivity of domestic firms. In this study, we advance the literature by examining the effect of the diversity of FDI country origins on the productivity of domestic firms. We propose that the diversity of FDI country origins can facilitate FDI spillovers by increasing the variety of technologies and management practices brought by foreign firms, to which domestic firms are exposed and that they can potentially utilize. Further, the extent to which domestic firms can utilize these technologies and practices depends upon their absorptive capacity. Using panel data on Chinese manufacturing firms during the period 1998–2003, our results support these propositions. We find that the diversity of FDI country origins in an industry has a positive relationship with the productivity of domestic firms in the industry. This positive relationship is stronger when domestic firms are larger, and when the technology gap between FDI and the domestic firms is intermediate. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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