The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms

Using a very comprehensive Chinese firm-level data covering the period of 2000 to 2005, this thesis empirically assesses the determinants and consequences of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in China. In particular, the novelty of this research lies in our firm-level analysis which is based on a larg...

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Main Author: Wang, Hao
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14170/
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author Wang, Hao
author_facet Wang, Hao
author_sort Wang, Hao
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Using a very comprehensive Chinese firm-level data covering the period of 2000 to 2005, this thesis empirically assesses the determinants and consequences of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in China. In particular, the novelty of this research lies in our firm-level analysis which is based on a large sample of firms in 31 host provinces, allowing us to explore the question by distinguishing different modes of FDI inflows. We employ binary-choice models to estimate how institutional quality and pre-acquisition firm heterogeneity affect the probabilities of domestic firms being acquired by foreign investors. We find better institution quality encourages FDI and this effect is stronger in capital-intensive and R&D intensive industries. Moreover, in capital-intensive industries, better institutions reduce the probability of domestic firms being wholly acquired. We also find evidence of 'cherry-picking' which is stronger in capital- and R&D- intensive industries. We then apply a combination of propensity-score matching and difference-in-difference estimation to assess the effect of foreign acquisition on acquired firms with a focus on export performance, productivity and financial indicators. We find significant FDI-induced export lift and finance improvement. However, FDI-induced productivity change is not significant. Finally, we investigate whether location determinants have different effects on attracting greenfield FDI as compared to acquisition FDI. We find the industry cluster pushes greenfield FDI away due to competition effect while attracting acquisition FDI, indicating that procurement opportunities have a strong impact on acquisition FDI.
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spelling nottingham-141702025-02-28T11:29:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14170/ The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms Wang, Hao Using a very comprehensive Chinese firm-level data covering the period of 2000 to 2005, this thesis empirically assesses the determinants and consequences of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in China. In particular, the novelty of this research lies in our firm-level analysis which is based on a large sample of firms in 31 host provinces, allowing us to explore the question by distinguishing different modes of FDI inflows. We employ binary-choice models to estimate how institutional quality and pre-acquisition firm heterogeneity affect the probabilities of domestic firms being acquired by foreign investors. We find better institution quality encourages FDI and this effect is stronger in capital-intensive and R&D intensive industries. Moreover, in capital-intensive industries, better institutions reduce the probability of domestic firms being wholly acquired. We also find evidence of 'cherry-picking' which is stronger in capital- and R&D- intensive industries. We then apply a combination of propensity-score matching and difference-in-difference estimation to assess the effect of foreign acquisition on acquired firms with a focus on export performance, productivity and financial indicators. We find significant FDI-induced export lift and finance improvement. However, FDI-induced productivity change is not significant. Finally, we investigate whether location determinants have different effects on attracting greenfield FDI as compared to acquisition FDI. We find the industry cluster pushes greenfield FDI away due to competition effect while attracting acquisition FDI, indicating that procurement opportunities have a strong impact on acquisition FDI. 2014-07-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14170/1/Thesis_Hao_Wang_2014.pdf Wang, Hao (2014) The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Investments Foreign manufacturing industries China
spellingShingle Investments
Foreign
manufacturing industries
China
Wang, Hao
The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms
title The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms
title_full The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms
title_fullStr The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms
title_full_unstemmed The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms
title_short The determinants and consequences of FDI: evidence from Chinese manufacturing firms
title_sort determinants and consequences of fdi: evidence from chinese manufacturing firms
topic Investments
Foreign
manufacturing industries
China
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14170/