| Globalization | Poverty | Development | Sustainability |
| TAD/INF/2777 | |||
| 2 November 1998 | |||
| IMPORTANT SHIFTS ARE
EMERGING IN THE KEY FACTORS INFLUENCING FOREIGN BUSINESS INVESTMENTS Governments face new challenges in attracting foreign
investment, |
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| The factors determining where the world's
largest transnational corporations (TNCs) invest are becoming increasingly complex,
reflecting especially the rising importance of intangible assets. Access to technology and
innovative capacity in foreign countries is emerging as a crucial factor, states Rubens
Ricupero, Secretary-General of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD). In the World Investment Report 1998: Trends and Determinants (WIR98), released today by UNCTAD, the Secretary-General writes that, in contrast to natural resources, technology and innovative capacities are people-made, they are "created assets" and possessing such assets is critical for firms' competitiveness in a globalizing economy. Indeed, he writes in the Overview, "it is precisely the rise in the importance of created assets that is the single most important shift among the economic determinants of FDI location in a liberalizing and globalizing world economy." Key determinants of FDI: old and new At issue is an annual volume of FDI that is now approaching US$450 billion. Traditional determinants of FDI, driven by the need to access markets, as well as natural and other resources such as low-cost labour, are still key to attracting FDI, especially from new TNCs and from many that have yet to develop large-scale international operations. Thus, countries can be attractive to potential investors on account of the size and growth of their domestic markets, their geographic proximity and access to key potential markets, including large regional markets and the natural and other resources they host, and of course he extent to which they effectively strive to attract foreign investors. All the same, the existence of created assets is of mounting significance as a magnet for FDI inflows, especially from major TNCs.
UNCTAD's Secretary-General states: "The challenge
[for governments] is precisely to develop a well-calibrated and preferably unique
combination of determinants of FDI location, and to seek to match those determinants with
the strategies pursued by competitiveness-enhancing TNCs." Countries are now striving to promote themselves by highlighting "outer ring" policies. These include macro-economic policies, such as sound monetary policies that secure price stability and affect costs of capital; pro-investment fiscal policies that are attractive to executives and to firms; and exchange rate policies that impact the value of transferred profits, acquired assets and of exports. These "outer ring" policies today also include corporate organizational issues, as countries strive for advantage over other countries and more explicitly address the evolving needs of TNCs, as well as those of their own domestic firms, in an era of globalization. Host countries are gradually being evaluated by potential foreign investors on a broader base of policy considerations than the traditional ones, notes today's report. For example, countries are evolving technology policies that may make them attractive to TNCs that are increasingly placing value on technological advantages. The policy in this regard may relate to telecommunications privatization, or tax credits for technology research, or provision of programmes to facilitate technological partnerships between domestic and foreign firms. Then, countries are striving to develop labour market skills
that may be particularly attractive to TNCs, while also promoting infrastructure
developments that may give them advantage in terms of TNC requirements.
Pro-active measures WIR98 states that few of these measures are entirely
new, but "what is new is that, in a globalizing world economy such measures have
proliferated rapidly and become increasingly routine, pervasive and sophisticated." |
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| For more information, please contact: | |||
| Karl P. Sauvant Chief International Investment, Transnationals and Technology Flows Branch Division on Investment, Technology and Enterprise Development UNCTAD Telephone: +41 22 907 57 07 Fax: + 41 22 907 01 94 e-mail: karl.sauvant@unctad.org |
or | Carine Richard-Van Maele Chief Press Unit UNCTAD Telephone: +41 22 917 5816/28 Fax: +41 22 907 0043 e-mail: press@unctad.org |
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