Abstract

Foreign direct investments are seen as a prerequisite for gaining and maintaining competitiveness. The research objective of this study is to examine the relationship between foreign direct investment (FDI) and economic growth in “new” European Union member countries using various unit root, cointegration, as well as causality tests. The paper employs annual data for FDI and gross domestic product (GDP) from 2002 to 2018 for the 13 most recent members of European Union (EU13): Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. An estimated panel ARDL (PMG) model found evidence that there is a long-run equilibrium between the LogGDP, LogFDI and LogFDIP series, with the rate of adjustment back to equilibrium between 3.27% and 20.67%. In the case of the LogFDI series, long-run coefficients are highly statistically significant in all four models, varying between 0.0828 and 0.3019. These coefficients indicate that a 1% increase in LogFDI increases LogGDP between 0.0828% and 0.3019%. Results of a Dumitrescu-Hurlin panel causality test indicated that a relationship between the GDP growth rate and FDI growth rate is only indirect. Finally, only weak evidence was shown that FDI had a statistically significant impact on GDP in the EU13 countries over the period 2002-2018. This report of findings contributes to the literature concerning FDI and economic growth, namely regarding the current understanding of the relationship between these two factors.

Highlights

  • Four types of foreign direct investment (FDI) can be determined depending on the motive for investment: market seeking, resource seeking, efficiency seeking and strategic asset seeking (Meyer, 2015).Theories on FDI and economic growth emphasize the relationship between these two variables, with FDI found to be important for economic growth especially in developing countries (Sothan, 2017)

  • 4.1 Unit root tests For testing Granger causality in panel datasets, the Stata user-written command xtgcause (Lopez & Weber, 2017), which implements a procedure proposed by Dumitrescu & Hurlin (2012), was used

  • Paper attempts to investigate the relationship between FDI and gross domestic product (GDP) in the EU13 countries

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Summary

Introduction

Four types of FDI can be determined depending on the motive for investment: market seeking, resource seeking, efficiency seeking and strategic asset seeking (Meyer, 2015). Theories on FDI and economic growth emphasize the relationship between these two variables, with FDI found to be important for economic growth especially in developing countries (Sothan, 2017). Markusen & Venables (1997) determined that FDI leads to the development of local industry in the host country. Stanisic (2008) claims that FDI, besides the effect on economic growth, produces one more important effect on the host economies - export performance. Empirical evidence on the issues involved has been mixed. The aim of this paper is to examine the relationship between GDP and economic growth using the sample of the 13 “new” European Union countries (EU13), all of which began EU membership in 2004

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