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Course contents (Foreign Direct Investment FDI)
- Introduction to the Foreign direct investment (FDI).
- FDI outlook.
- World Trade Organization and FDI. Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures (TRIMs).
- OECD and the Foreign Direct Investment.
- European Union policy on FDI.
- The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency's (MIGA).
- Appendices: Index of economic freedom (Heritage). FDI atlas. FDI and developing countries.
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Summary
Foreign direct investment reflects the objective of obtaining a lasting interest by a resident entity in one economy ... Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency's MIGA.
Foreign direct investment reflects the objective of obtaining a
lasting interest by a resident entity in one economy ("direct investor") in an
entity resident in an economy other than that of the investor ("direct investment enterprise").
The lasting interest implies the existence of a long-term relationship
between the direct investor and the enterprise and a significant degree of
influence on the management of the enterprise.
Direct investment involves both the initial transaction between the two entities
and all subsequent capital transactions between them and among affiliated
enterprises, both incorporated and unincorporated.
OECD recommends that a direct investment enterprise be defined as an
incorporated or unincorporated enterprise in which a foreign investor owns 10
per cent or more of the ordinary shares or voting power of an incorporated
enterprise or the equivalent of an unincorporated enterprise.
Global foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows grew in 2007 to an estimated
US$1.5 trillion, surpassing the previous record set in the year 2000. FDI flows
to developed countries in 2007 grew for the fourth consecutive year, reaching
US$1 trillion. Flows were particularly buoyant in the United Kingdom, France,
and the Netherlands. The United States
maintained its position as the largest single FDI recipient. The
European Union
(EU) as a whole continued to be the largest host region, attracting almost 40%
of total FDI inflows in 2007. However, several risks to the world economy may have implications for FDI flows to and from
developed countries in 2009.
- In Africa, FDI inflows in 2007 remained
relatively strong. The unprecedented level of inflows (US$36 billion) was
supported by a continuing boom in global commodity markets.
- FDI inflows to Latin America and the Caribbean,
meanwhile, rose by 50% to a record level of US$126 billion. Significant
increases were recorded in the region´s major economies, especially
Brazil, Chile and Mexico, where inflows doubled.
- FDI inflows to South, East and South-East Asia,
and Oceania maintained their upward trend in 2007, reaching a new high of US$224
billion, an increase of 12% over 2006. More than half of all FDI to developing
countries went to these economies. At the subregional level, there was a further
shift towards South and South-East Asia, although
China and Hong Kong (China) remained the two largest
recipients in the region.
- In West Asia, overall FDI inflows declined by 12%.
Turkey and oil-rich Gulf States continued to attract the
most, but geopolitical uncertainty in parts of the region affected FDI overall.
- FDI to South-East Europe and the
CIS, or
transition economies, expanded significantly, by 41%, to a new record of US$98
billion. This was the seventh year of uninterrupted growth of FDI in the region.
Inflows almost doubled to the region´s largest recipient, the
Russian Federation.
(Source: UNCTAD)
OECD gathers and analyses detailed statistics on international direct
investment and publishes statistics and reports on aid and other resource flows
to developing countries and countries in transition and related matters. OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises are recommendations addressed by
governments to multinational enterprises operating in or from adhering
countries. The 2002 United Nations
Monterrey Consensus ascribes critical importance to mobilizing private
investment, both domestic and foreign, for achieving the development objectives
of the Millennium Declaration.
The Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures (“TRIMs Agreement”), one
of the Multilateral Agreements on Trade in Goods, prohibits trade-related
investment measures, such as local content requirements, that are inconsistent
with basic provisions of GATT 1994.
While being one of world’s biggest investors, the European Union
considers Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) as a key means to promote development
and economic and social growth. The European policy on investment develops in
consistency with the existing international rules that are most relevant to this
area, i.e. the WTO (World Trade
Organization) General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), the Guidelines
for Multinational Enterprises developed in the OECD framework, and other OECD
instruments.
The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency's (MIGA). As a member
of the World Bank Group, MIGA's mission is to promote foreign direct
investment (FDI) into developing countries to help support economic growth,
reduce poverty, and improve people's lives.
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Foreign, Direct Investment, FDI, Europe, Asia, America, Africa, Multilateral, Investment, Guarantee, Agency, MIGA, Developing Countries, Master, resident, economy, International Business
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