Abstract
AbstractNegative foreign direct investment (divestment) between countries has received little attention in international macroeconomics. This is the first country-level study to investigate whether conventional drivers of bilateral foreign direct investment (FDI) have a reverse, but symmetric, impact on foreign direct divestment (FDD). Using bilateral negative and positive FDI data between 126 countries or territories, from 2005 to 2018, we find that conventional gravity variables that have statistically significant effects on FDI, such as host and source country GDP, distance, and source-country remoteness, have similar-signed effects on FDD, rather than opposite-signed effects. Formal testing of whether coefficients on the determinants of the absolute value of divestment are equal but opposite signed to those for investment rejects this hypothesis. The view that what may lead to more FDI may impede FDD is not supported by our empirical findings.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Mathematics (miscellaneous),Statistics and Probability
Cited by
9 articles.
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