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Columbia FDI Perspectives

Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues
Editor-in-Chief: Karl P. Sauvant (Karl.Sauvant@law.columbia.edu)
Managing Editor: Riccardo Loschi (Riccardo.loschi@columbia.edu)


The Columbia FDI Perspectives are a forum for public debate. The views expressed by the authors do not reflect the opinions of CCSI or our partners and supporters.

No. 311   August 9, 2021
 
Outward FDI (OFDI) can be integrated in both national and corporate growth strategies.[1] As to the former, the key is to understand OFDI policy as progressing down a path that informs the selection of home-country measures (HCMs); target OFDI, to both leverage existing and develop new capacity; and ensure that investment and trade policies are aligned and mutually supportive.
 
The OFDI policy path. Economies such as China, India, Mexico, Poland, Singapore, Thailand, and the US have successfully integrated OFDI into their national development strategies, by following a four-stage pattern, characterized by the level of governmental support for OFDI:
  • Removing some OFDI restrictions. As economies develop, policymakers start worrying less about capital outflows and more about competitiveness. Data show that economies remove OFDI restrictions as they develop, with developed economies having almost no restrictions in place.[2]
  • Facilitating OFDI. Governments can facilitate OFDI, including by providing information and advice on FDI climates or through negotiating treaties, whether double taxation agreements or international investment agreements.
  • Promoting OFDI. The level of support ramps up, moving from creating conditions for OFDI to actively promoting it. Non-financial support can include business missions, matchmaking or project development. Financial support can include guarantees, feasibility studies, office space abroad, loans, equity, and tax incentives.
  • Calibrating OFDI support. Policymakers can calibrate OFDI support by reducing support or re-imposing some restrictions. Changing domestic economic priorities or concerns with business practices in foreign markets can precipitate this stage.
Visualizing this path can help policymakers identify the right OFDI policy and HCMs, depending on where an economy is along the OFDI path.
 
HCMs can range from relatively light to relatively heavy support.[3] As economies move along, policymakers can add new “bricks” (i.e., HCMs) to increasingly support domestic firms to become outward investors.
 
To maximize OFDI benefits, policymakers should “lay bricks” both vertically and horizontally. Horizontal action means providing OFDI support that is sector agnostic. This opens the door to helping firms capable of investing abroad, but not operating within targeted sectors. Horizontal HCMs can include host country market information, match-making services, feasibility studies, and political-risk insurance.
 
Vertical action entails targeting sectors for OFDI support. To identify which sectors to target through vertical support, policymakers can use a simple exercise and an existing tool:
  • Policymakers should list sectors they aim to grow and use OFDI to develop new capacity and competitiveness. HCMs can help firms use OFDI to target products that are closely related but slightly more complex than those they currently produce following the Product Space and the Product Complexity Index.[4] Firms will be able to absorb the knowledge and technology embedded in the production of these goods and services, thereby helping them upgrade.
  • Policymakers should identify sectors in which they are already competitive (e.g., using their revealed comparative advantage) and use OFDI to leverage existing capacity and competitiveness.
It is important to acknowledge that OFDI remains controversial and there can be trade-offs. Policymakers fear offshoring jobs and foregoing domestic investment. While benefits are not automatic, the evidence suggests that OFDI can generate positive effects through increased competitiveness, not just for outward-investing firms, but also spilling into home economies, including through increased productivity, innovation, exports, revenue, and job upgrading.[5]
 
As a result, governments are beginning to organize themselves to support OFDI. Developing economies generally assign inward FDI (IFDI) and export promotion functions to different institutions. As economies develop, they often merge these institutions[6] and add the OFDI support function[7] to better actuate their strategy. For instance, the Polish Investment and Trade Agency was restructured in 2017 to combine export and investment promotion and a new department for OFDI was created.
 
To close with an example, policymakers and firms may develop the microchip industry by attracting FDI to develop capacity, plug into value chains by exporting microchips and use OFDI to both leverage existing capacity (e.g., opening a plant in an economy whose microchip industry is relatively less complex) and develop new capacity (e.g., acquiring a plant in an economy whose microchip industry is relatively more complex).
 
While this is not easy, with a clear framework in place, policymakers and firms can better align actions and resources and bring new OFDI tools to help economic growth and development.
 
* Matthew Stephenson (matthew.stephenson@weforum.org) is Policy and Community Lead, International Trade and Investment, World Economic Forum. The author would like to thank Alvaro Cuervo-Cazurra, Nigel Driffield and Jan Knoerich for their helpful peer reviews.
The material in this Perspective may be reprinted if accompanied by the following acknowledgment: “Matthew Stephenson, ‘The OFDI policy path and the product space,’ Columbia FDI Perspectives No. 311, August 9, 2021. Reprinted with permission from the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (http://ccsi.columbia.edu).” A copy should kindly be sent to the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment at ccsi@law.columbia.edu.
For further information, including information regarding submission to the Perspectives, please contact: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, Riccardo Loschi, riccardo.loschi@columbia.edu.
 
Most recent Columbia FDI Perspectives   
  • No. 310, Mario Mancuso, “CFIUS and China in the post-COVID environment,” Columbia FDI Perspectives, July 26, 2021
  • No. 309, Rafael Ramos Codeço and Ana Rachel Freitas da Silva, “CSR in an Investment Facilitation Framework for Development: From a ‘race to the bottom’ to a ‘march to the to’,” Columbia FDI Perspectives, July 12, 2021
  • No. 308, Manjiao Chi and Zongyao Li, ‘China’s foreign investment complaint mechanism: A new beginning of foreign investment governance reform?,’ Columbia FDI Perspectives, June 28, 2021
All previous FDI Perspectives are available at https://ccsi.columbia.edu/content/columbia-fdi-perspectives

Other relevant CCSI news and announcements
  • CCSI is hiring a Legal or Policy Researcher to work on our Land, Agriculture & Food Systems portfolio of projects. This position will collaborate with CCSI’s Director and Research Staff to execute the Center’s applied research agenda on the laws, policies, and practices that shape international investment and its alignment with sustainable development and human rights. For further details, and to apply, please see here.
Karl P. Sauvant, Ph.D.
Resident Senior Fellow
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Columbia Law School - Earth Institute
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(212) 854-0689
Fax: (212) 854-7946
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Karl P. Sauvant, PhD

Resident Senior Fellow

Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Columbia Law School - The Earth Institute, Columbia University
435 West 116th St., Rm. JGH 825, New York, NY 10027
p(212) 854 0689 | cell: (646) 724 5600 e: karlsauvant@gmail.com
wwww.ccsi.columbia.edu | t: @CCSI_Columbia

"Increasing Transparency in Investment Facilitation: Focussed Support is Needed", "A Multilateral Investment Facilitation Agreement can Help Advancing Development", Investment Facilitation for Development: A Toolkit for Policymakers, "More Attention to Policies! Improving the Distribution of FDI Benefits. The Need for Policy-oriented Research, Advice and Advocacy", "More and Better Investment Now!", "Facilitating Sustainable FDI in a WTO Investment Facilitation Framework: Four Concrete Proposals", "Multinational Enterprises and the Global Investment Regime: Toward Balancing Rights and Responsibilities”, “The WIR at 30: Contributions to National and International Policymaking", "An Inventory of Concrete Measures to Facilitate the Flow of Sustainable FDI: What? Why? How?", "Insulating a WTO Investment Facilitation Framework from ISDS", "The Case for an Advisory Centre on International Investment Law", "The Potential Value-added of a Multilateral Framework on Investment Facilitation for Development" are available at https://ssrn.com/author=2461782 .

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