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Auteur Sanjaya Lall |
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Les multinationales originaires du tiers monde / Sanjaya Lall
Titre : Les multinationales originaires du tiers monde Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Sanjaya Lall, Auteur Editeur : Paris [France] : PUF Année de publication : 1984 Collection : Institut de recherche et d'information sur les multinationales Importance : 331 p Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : Entreprises multinationales Tags : Multinationales Pays en développement Inde Hong Kong Argentine Brésil Investissements IDE Index. décimale : 04.01 Entreprises - Généralités Les multinationales originaires du tiers monde [texte imprimé] / Sanjaya Lall, Auteur . - Paris (France) : PUF, 1984 . - 331 p. - (Institut de recherche et d'information sur les multinationales) .
Langues : Français (fre)
Catégories : Entreprises multinationales Tags : Multinationales Pays en développement Inde Hong Kong Argentine Brésil Investissements IDE Index. décimale : 04.01 Entreprises - Généralités The impact of China’s FDI surge on FDI in South-East Asia: panel data analysis for 1986-2001 / Yuping Zhou in Transnational Corporations, TRANSCORP 14/1 (April 2005) ([11/12/2018])
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Titre : The impact of China’s FDI surge on FDI in South-East Asia: panel data analysis for 1986-2001 Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Yuping Zhou, Auteur ; Sanjaya Lall, Auteur Année de publication : 2018 Article en page(s) : p. 41-66 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Chine
CommerceTags : IDE Chine Asie du Sud-Est Index. décimale : 03.01 COMMERCE / MONDIALISATION Généralités Résumé : China’s surge in foreign direct investment inflows is raising concerns that it is taking such investment away from other South-East Asian economies. This article assesses whether this is the case, using fixed-effects estimation to test for the relationships between FDI in South-East Asian economies within a simple model of location determinants of foreign direct investment, assuming the supply of FDI to be elastic. The results suggest that China raised rather than diverted such investment into neighbouring economies during 1986-2001; the results obtain whether inflows are lagged or not. This may be because countries do not compete for foreign direct investment in market and resource-seeking activities; the only competitive segment is likely to be export-processing – here China may be complementing other countries in electronics, where they are being integrated into a regional production network. There may be FDI substitution in other export-oriented industries, but the effect is not large enough to influence the results. However, the data do not allow different types of FDI to be tested separately, and this conclusion remains speculative. En ligne : https://unctad.org/en/Docs/iteiit20051_en.pdf
in Transnational Corporations > TRANSCORP 14/1 (April 2005) [11/12/2018] . - p. 41-66[article] The impact of China’s FDI surge on FDI in South-East Asia: panel data analysis for 1986-2001 [texte imprimé] / Yuping Zhou, Auteur ; Sanjaya Lall, Auteur . - 2018 . - p. 41-66.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transnational Corporations > TRANSCORP 14/1 (April 2005) [11/12/2018] . - p. 41-66
Catégories : Chine
CommerceTags : IDE Chine Asie du Sud-Est Index. décimale : 03.01 COMMERCE / MONDIALISATION Généralités Résumé : China’s surge in foreign direct investment inflows is raising concerns that it is taking such investment away from other South-East Asian economies. This article assesses whether this is the case, using fixed-effects estimation to test for the relationships between FDI in South-East Asian economies within a simple model of location determinants of foreign direct investment, assuming the supply of FDI to be elastic. The results suggest that China raised rather than diverted such investment into neighbouring economies during 1986-2001; the results obtain whether inflows are lagged or not. This may be because countries do not compete for foreign direct investment in market and resource-seeking activities; the only competitive segment is likely to be export-processing – here China may be complementing other countries in electronics, where they are being integrated into a regional production network. There may be FDI substitution in other export-oriented industries, but the effect is not large enough to influence the results. However, the data do not allow different types of FDI to be tested separately, and this conclusion remains speculative. En ligne : https://unctad.org/en/Docs/iteiit20051_en.pdf