Publication | Open Access
ASSESSING THE REGIONAL IMPACT OF GRANTS ON FDI LOCATION: EVIDENCE FROM U.K. REGIONAL POLICY, 1985–2005
36
Citations
53
References
2010
Year
International EconomicsLocal Economic DevelopmentInternational InvestmentRegional DevelopmentPolicy AnalysisInward Fdi ProjectsEvidence From U.kInvestment GrantsEconomic AnalysisRegional ScienceInternational BusinessForeign Direct InvestmentPublic PolicyEconomicsRegional EconomicsRegional PolicySpatial EconomicsEconomic PolicyBusinessRegional Fiscal Disparities
ABSTRACT The paper implements a methodology for assessing the regional impact of investment grants on foreign direct investment (FDI) location, taking data for U.K. regional policy over the period 1985–2005. Using a Generalized Methods of Moments estimator it finds that each £25 million of grant changes the regional location of about six inward FDI projects. On average, projects have 150 jobs and each job diverted costs £27,500 (1995 prices). It also finds that the size of the area designated for grants has a positive location effect. The effect is small in relation to the overall scale of FDI, which may explain the weak grant effect found in recent plant-based location studies.
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