Abstract

ABSTRACT In this study, we investigate the impact of four religious factors on Moroccan outward FDI in African countries: the religious freedom index, religious tension index, religious similarity, and religious diversity index. Using panel data from 27 African countries between 2007 and 2021, our findings show that religious factors significantly influence Moroccan FDI in Africa. A shared Islamic religion increases FDI likelihood, indicating cultural proximity facilitates multinational enterprise adaptation. Additionally, religious freedom and diversity positively affect FDI, supporting cultural adaptability. However, religious tension negatively impacts FDI. These findings highlight the importance of considering religious factors in FDI decision-making processes. Policy implications include promoting cultural understanding, encouraging religious freedom, fostering religious diversity, and reducing religious tensions to facilitate investment and enhance economic cooperation in African countries.

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