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Growth Impact and Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment into South Africa, 1956-2003

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors study the impact of foreign direct investment in South Africa and find that foreign investment has tended to be capital intensive, suggesting that FDI has been horizontal rather than vertical, implying a positive technological spillover from foreign to domestic capital.
Abstract
The paper is concerned with the growth impact and the determinants of foreign direct investment in South Africa. Estimation is in terms of a standard spill-over model of investment, and in terms of a new model of locational choice in FDI between domestic and foreign alternatives. We find complementarity of foreign and domestic capital in the long run, implying a positive technological spill-over from foreign to domestic capital. While there is a crowd-out of domestic investment from foreign direct investment, this impact is restricted to the short run. Further we find that foreign direct investment in South Africa has tended to be capital intensive, suggesting that foreign direct investment has been horizontal rather than vertical. Determinants of foreign direct investment in South Africa lie in the net rate of return, as well as the risk profile of the foreign direct investment liabilities. Policy handles are both direct and powerful. Reducing political risk, ensuring property rights, most importantly bolstering growth in the market size, as well as wage moderation, lowering corporate tax rates, and ensuring full integration of the South African economy into the world economy all follow as policy prescriptions from our empirical findings.

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In search of FDI-led growth in developing countries: The way forward

TL;DR: In this article, the authors re-examine the FDI-led growth hypothesis for 28 developing countries using cointegration techniques on a country-by-country basis and find that in the vast majority of countries, there exists neither a long-term nor a short-term effect of FDI on growth.
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The impact of horizontal and vertical FDI on host's country economic growth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of FDI on host country economic growth by distinguishing between the growth effects of horizontal (market seeking) FDI and vertical FDI, and found that horizontal FDI has positive and significant growth effects in developed countries.
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