Transnational Corporations - Volume 23, Issue 2, 2017
Volume 23, Issue 2, 2017
Transnational Corporations is a policy-oriented journal that serves as a specialized forum for the publication of research on the activities of transactional corporations and their implication for economic development.
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Has outward foreign direct investment contributed to the development of the Chinese economy?
More LessAuthor: Jan KnoerichResearch and literature on foreign direct investment (FDI) and economic development have to date focused almost entirely on development in the host economy, sidelining the question of any contribution to development in a multinational enterprise’s country of origin. To address this shortcoming in research on FDI, this study investigates whether Chinese outward FDI can be seen as having made a contribution to the development of the mainland Chinese economy over the past three decades. It finds that the activity of Chinese enterprises in pursuing assets and advantages abroad through outward FDI yields four categories of returns: financial, capability, capacity and macroeconomic. These returns have addressed some of the specific challenges that China has faced in the process of its economic development, although the extent and importance of the development contribution remains uncertain. Outward FDI can play both a complementary and a supplementary role to development benefits realized from opening up to international trade and inward FDI, and from emigration.
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Understanding South Africa’s current account deficit: The role of foreign direct investment income
More LessAuthor: Ilan StraussThis article highlights the prominence of net investment income payments made to foreign direct investors in South Africa’s current account deficit. After a brief history of South Africa’s balance of payments, we describe several factors driving the growth of South Africa’s direct investment assets and liabilities, including the roles of China and Africa as investment destinations and the relisting of major South African companies abroad. The slow accumulation of direct investment assets by South African firms before 2006, coupled with the higher returns on South Africa’s direct investment liabilities, has contributed to an imbalance in the country’s net FDI income, while a compositional shift in the stock of non-FDI liabilities has helped to decrease its payments to non-direct investors. If South African firms continue to invest productively abroad, net FDI income may contribute less to South Africa’s current account deficit in the future. The trade deficit remains a major area of concern.
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