The determinants of inward FDI in India in the 2000s

IF 2.1 Q3 BUSINESS
C. Wagner, A. Delios
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Abstract

Purpose Unlike the traditional growth model of emerging markets after economic liberalization, India’s inward foreign direct investment (FDI) surged paralleling its strong economic growth in the 2000s, despite the failure to establish a strong secondary sector. This creates an opportunity to deepen the conceptual and contextual understanding of the pivotal mechanisms that impel foreign multinational enterprises to invest into India and provides a natural setting to better understand the nature of its institutional, political and economic environment. Design/methodology/approach The authors develop a theory contextualized to Indian inward FDI patterns for the 2000–2017 period. The theoretical framework expands upon received investment motives, with explicit consideration given to the idiosyncrasies of developments in India’s recent macro and socioeconomic environment. The authors test the hypotheses using panel data from 134 countries that invested in India, using a Hausman–Taylor estimation. Findings The authors find that India’s transition toward a knowledge economy attracts asset augmenting rather than asset exploiting FDI. Investors appear to target long-term investments by gaining access to India’s digital capabilities, R&D, and growing talent base with a high degree of specialization within analytics, biotechnology, engineering, or pharmaceuticals. Foreign investors do not seem to be notably deterred by infrastructural challenges nor by legal and regulatory restrictions. Originality/value By providing a new perspective on India’s atheoretical economic development and FDI environment, this study offers a distinct point of comparison with regard to established hypotheses within the extant literature on FDI into emerging markets. Rethinking contemporary investment motive theory by introducing an adapted conceptual framework provides further opportunity to inform the understanding of firm strategies in similar environments.
2000年代印度FDI流入的决定因素
目的与经济自由化后新兴市场的传统增长模式不同,尽管未能建立强大的第二产业,但印度的外来直接投资在21世纪初与强劲的经济增长同步激增。这为加深对推动外国跨国企业投资印度的关键机制的概念和背景理解创造了机会,并为更好地了解其制度、政治和经济环境的性质提供了自然环境。设计/方法论/方法作者根据2000-2007年期间印度内向外国直接投资模式发展了一个理论。该理论框架扩展了公认的投资动机,明确考虑了印度最近宏观和社会经济环境中发展的特点。作者使用来自134个在印度投资的国家的面板数据,使用Hausman-Taylor估计来检验这些假设。研究结果作者发现,印度向知识经济的转型吸引的是增加资产,而不是利用资产的外国直接投资。投资者似乎通过获得印度的数字能力、研发和不断增长的分析、生物技术、工程或制药领域高度专业化的人才基础来瞄准长期投资。外国投资者似乎并没有因为基础设施挑战或法律和监管限制而受到明显的阻碍。独创性/价值通过对印度的理论经济发展和外国直接投资环境提供一个新的视角,本研究与现有关于向新兴市场投资的文献中的既定假设提供了一个独特的比较点。通过引入一个适应性的概念框架来重新思考当代投资动机理论,为理解类似环境中的企业战略提供了进一步的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
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