Policies towards the OFDI and IFDI in the European Union after the 2008+ crisis

Objective: The significant drop in international foreign direct investment (FDI) flows as observed in the aftermath of 2008+ crisis and accompanying ideological shifts as to the role of the State in the economy have been the inspiration for conducting research on the interface of these two. The obje...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marta Götz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cracow University of Economics 2016-06-01
Series:Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http:////eber.uek.krakow.pl/index.php/eber/article/view/124
Description
Summary:Objective: The significant drop in international foreign direct investment (FDI) flows as observed in the aftermath of 2008+ crisis and accompanying ideological shifts as to the role of the State in the economy have been the inspiration for conducting research on the interface of these two. The objective has been to evaluate the (post)crisis FDI policies in Europe. Research Design & Methods: By synthesising the available sources – critical literature review, evaluation of rankings and scoreboards and experts’ survey - this paper seeks to classify the EU member states according to their policies pursued towards outward and inward foreign direct investment (IFDI, OFDI) in the context of 2008+ crisis. Findings: A simple matrix with four possible combinations of FDI policy has been proposed. It distinguishes: an open model with “a double positive strategy”, closed with “a double negative strategy”, competitive with “a positive outward and negative inward strategy”, and a capital model with “a positive inward, negative outward strategy”. Obtained results point to the dominance of two opposite models where countries seem to apply combinations of rather friendly IFDI (or OFDI) and unfriendly OFDI (or IFDI) policies. Implications & Recommendations: Current scarcity of the proper metric of FDI policy has made it necessary to draw on some imperfect substitutes, hence findings must be treated with caution. Properly designed, reliable international database enabling cross-country comparisons in terms of FDI policies would certainly improve the quality of future research. Contribution & Value Added: Presented research findings can be seen as the voice in the discussion on FDI policy in Europe, in particular on the issue of operationalisation of such policy.
ISSN:2353-883X
2353-8821