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EU enlargement and foreign direct investment into transition economies revisited / Ichiro Iwasaki in Transnational Corporations, TRANSCORP 18/3 (December 2009)
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Titre : EU enlargement and foreign direct investment into transition economies revisited Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Ichiro Iwasaki, Auteur ; Keiko Suganuma, Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : p. 27-57 Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : IDE Economies de transition Europe de l'Est Résumé : It is highly likely that EU accession negotiation had a large influence on foreign direct investment (FDI) into the Central and Eastern European countries involved therin. We found that as the membership talks progressed, the effect of attracting FDI to candidate states tended to increase gradually. It also became clear that EU member candidate countries experienced an adverse impact on FDI at the very final phase of the negotiation. This might have been due to the substantial revision of conventional FDI incentives, which most likely was the price paid for becoming new EU members. The relationship between the progress in the EU enlargement process and FDI received by the candidate countries was not a simple positive relationship, but followed a reverse J-shaped curve.
in Transnational Corporations > TRANSCORP 18/3 (December 2009) . - p. 27-57[article] EU enlargement and foreign direct investment into transition economies revisited [texte imprimé] / Ichiro Iwasaki, Auteur ; Keiko Suganuma, Auteur . - 2011 . - p. 27-57.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transnational Corporations > TRANSCORP 18/3 (December 2009) . - p. 27-57
Tags : IDE Economies de transition Europe de l'Est Résumé : It is highly likely that EU accession negotiation had a large influence on foreign direct investment (FDI) into the Central and Eastern European countries involved therin. We found that as the membership talks progressed, the effect of attracting FDI to candidate states tended to increase gradually. It also became clear that EU member candidate countries experienced an adverse impact on FDI at the very final phase of the negotiation. This might have been due to the substantial revision of conventional FDI incentives, which most likely was the price paid for becoming new EU members. The relationship between the progress in the EU enlargement process and FDI received by the candidate countries was not a simple positive relationship, but followed a reverse J-shaped curve.