Abstract
ABSTRACT This article gives insight into the influence of FDI on income distribution in post-communist new EU member states. Using the method of seemingly unrelated regressions on panel data from 1990–2014, we find robust evidence of a nonlinear relationship between FDI and income distribution. The observed FDI effect varies by income shares. In the case of the bottom 50% income share, the impact of FDI on income concentration is homogeneous and negative; for the middle 40%, FDI first increases and then reduces its income share, whereas for the top 10% this effect is first negative and then positive.
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