ABSTRACT

This book provides an insightful exploration of whether foreign direct investment (FDI) can promote the productivity of domestic enterprises. The book is based on a series of dedicated research conducted in the context of the Chinese economy, which has been the largest FDI host among the developing economies since 1993.

The main themes of this book are (a) based on the latest literature and first-hand research, outlining possible mechanisms through which foreign direct investment could promote the productivity of domestic enterprises; (b) developing a comprehensive research framework to quantify the spillover effects with cutting-edge methodology; (c) constructing a decision support system for evaluating FDI policy reforms with advanced computer simulation techniques; (d) evaluating the broader impact of FDI spillovers on banking system and trade pattern.

The book examines topical economic issues in the contemporary world economy from innovative perspectives, namely, how the presence of multinational enterprises has been one of the most important microeconomic drivers for the Chinese economy, how foreign banks have helped to enable Chinese banking system survive the global financial crisis, and how the domestic enterprises have learned to do exports from multinational affiliates and have changed the landscape of U.S.-Asian trade. The book incorporates the latest development of economic theory as well as computational economics model.

part |29 pages

Stylised facts and literature review

part |13 pages

Econometric analyses for quantification of spillover effects

chapter |7 pages

The interplay between foreign and domestic enterprises

Firm-level analysis

chapter |5 pages

What do the aggregate data tell us?

Industry-level analysis

part |116 pages

A general equilibrium framework for quantification of spillover effects

part |51 pages

Significant impact of FDI productivity spillovers

chapter |16 pages

Swapping market access for productivity spillovers?

An assessment of 2008 corporate income tax reform

chapter |13 pages

Why was the Chinese banking system able to survive the global financial crisis?

The role of WTO accession and FDI efficiency spillovers

chapter |4 pages

Concluding remarks