Abstract

According to the stylized facts of the empirical real business cycle literature, investment is a procyclical variable, i.e. it co-moves with business cycles. Consequently, foreign direct investment's procyclical behavior is hypothesized and tested in this paper. A big sample of 74 (and 65 in the extended model) countries is used, and the hypothesis is tested on quarterly data with an average length of 90 periods, i.e. 22 years. Business cycles are identified by the Hodrick-Prescott filter, and the use of high-frequency data makes the results more precise and reliable. Using fixed effect regressions first the procyclicality of domestic investment is demonstrated, then the cyclical behavior of foreign direct investment is tested. Data shows that FDI is also procyclical. This result is robust, as it takes into account potential confounding variables. The paper's conclusion is that there is significant co-movement between foreign direct investment inflows and the recipient countries' business cycles.

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