The Vulnerability of a Small, Open Economy in A Situation of Global Fiscal Crisis: The Impact of the Greek Debt Crisis on the Foreign Direct Investments to Macedonia

Author:

Mano Viktorija1

Affiliation:

1. Roehampton University, Erasmus House Roehampton Lane, London, UK

Abstract

The objective of my research is to critique the International Monetary Fund (IMF) stance on foreign investment and the benefits for small, open economies of allowing the free movement of capital. In my research as a whole I will explore the extent to which this stance impacted upon and influenced the economic policies of Macedonia. This will involve providing a contextualized, critical account of the policy of the IMF focusing on a comparison of its policies during the early 2000s through policy documents, political discourse and enacted policies in Macedonia. The conditionality associated with these policies, such as the enforcement of austerity measures (including cutting public spending and reducing debt) and the privatization of public institutions has provoked strong reactions in countries which receive such loans (Goldstein et al., 2003; Feldstein, 1998). Moreover, the main aim of the policies and the lack of in-depth analysis on the levels of development of the economies involved has had devastating outcomes in the past (such as with the East Asian currency crisis [1997/8], Latin American – Argentinian crisis [2001], Ex-Soviet Union crisis [1998], Eurozone crisis [2007/8]) (Lal, 1987; Goldstein et al., 2003; Joyce, 2003). My focus in this research is on exploring how the process of Financial Liberalization (FL) of the Macedonian economy affected capital flows in the form of foreign direct investments (FDI) in the private sector and how the recent Greek crisis of 2008 has impacted on this. According to Barnett and Monastiriotis, the neighboring countries (Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia and Serbia) in which Greece is either the first or the second largest direct investor, are ‘most vulnerable to negative spillover through reduced FDI flows’ as Greek-owned FDI accounts for 7-9% of the GDP of those countries (2010: 47). In the case of Macedonia, the reality of FL was tested by the collapse of the Greek economy. The first part of my research will critically evaluate simplified models used in previous research to explain the influence of crisis on FDI in small economies like Macedonia. I will argue that investigating the impact of FL is much more complex and cannot be explained by linear regression. Instead, by undertaking an in-depth documentary analysis of official reports and documents, I will seek to investigate how the official view of the benefits of FL impacted on the Macedonian economy, thus implicitly testing the accepted IMF position.

Publisher

Inovatus Usluge d.o.o.

Subject

General Medicine

Reference49 articles.

1. Acemoglu, D., Johnson, S., Robinson, J. and Thaicharoen, Y. (2002) ‘Institutional Causes, Macroeconomic

2. Altomonte, C. and Guagliano, C., (2001) ‘Competing Locations? Market and Potential and FDI in Central and Eastern Europe vs. The Mediterranean’, LICOS Centre for Transition Economies Working Paper, pp:1-30

3. Arthur, B.W. (2013) ‘Complexity Economics: A Different Framework for Economic Thought’, Oxford Univ. Press, 2013

4. Barker, M.R. (2009) ‘Micro-financing potential in FYR Macedonia’, Lethbridge Undergraduate Research Journal, 3(2)

5. Bartlett, W., and Monastiriotis, V. (2010) ‘South east Europe after the economic crisis: a new dawn or back to business as usual?’ London School of Economics and Political Science: LSE European Institute, 242-251 CrossRef

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